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| Provincial, Library 


14 
EDMONTON ’ 


THURSDAY, MAR 18th, 1927 


REDCLIFF REVIEW == 


OUR SLOGAN: An Indusitial Metropolis of industrious People Who Pull Together, 
af THE REDCLIFF REVIEW 


The Corona‘ios 


Oothimittees Appointed 
The Day’s Program 
There was a splendid repre- 
sentative meeting in the Town 
Hall last Friday evening, called 
for the purpose of making ar 
rangement, for some program 
om the occasion of the corona 
tion of King George’ VI. 
: Representatives were presert 
from almost every local organiz- 


Fort 


- gtion and keen interest was 


taken by those present. 

Mayor sangster opened the 
meeting and it was at once unan 
imously decided to organize for 
the purpose of making necessary 
preparations, in which all citiz 
ens and oganizations were (° 
take part. 

Rev H V Ellison wa; elected 
as presitent of the organization 
end Fank V Britt as secret°ry. 

Rtpresentatives from each o 
the local organizations were ap: 


pointed as an executive com-. 


mittee. 

The executive met after the 
general meeting and appointed 
the sub-committees :- 
R MacKenzie, WY 


ring, BSC, 4 


@eeeeeenevneeae 


Prepor Fir 


Eas.er 


We have a Nice Assortment of 


Fresh Fruits 
and Vegetables 


of All Kinds, and 


For the Children 
See Our Fine Assortment of 


New Pipes 


The Very Loteet Kind 


eececceescccoress® 


Receliff 
eeseeevee eevee 


> Etzicomb vice president; 


: 

: 

: 

: 

ON SING 
Broadway 


Redcliff 


to Celebrate th: King’s Coronation 


King George VI and Queen Elizabeth 


eS ee 


Business Grows 
At Pot.e y Pic nt 
in Past Ycar 


Improvements Mzede Ir 
Factory Equipment 


Big 


Development and improve- 
ments of conditions in connec: 
tion with Pottery plant here dur 
ing the past year have been 
most encouraging. Thig indus- 
try commenced operations her: 
afew duys ago on a small 
ecale but by careful planniag 
and increasing busiress it has 
gradually improved in equip- 
ment, the quality of its ware 


The company has an excep 
tionally fine building of sojd 
brick 60 x 160 feet on a fin® 
yiece of property made up of 2u 
lets. each lot 25 x 180 fovt 
which hes recently been weil 
fenced and is contiguous to a 
CP R sour track The replace: 
+e t volue of the popepty is set 
at $20,000. 

In connection with the plan‘ 
ae two fine modern kilns. ore 0! 
~shich was built recently with a 
4 foot di meter space inside 
‘~proved boiler and engines 
lave been installed since open 


‘mg up and are run by natural 


gas, 

The company has made a con 
tract for an unlimited supply of 
first grade clay foy use of man 
ufacturing their goods. At rres 
ent they have on hand a .splen- 
did supply of stone ware includ 
ing crocks, churns, bean pete 
cassoeroles, tég pots bowels 
vases, jardiniers, advertising 


novelties etc, and are now intro 


ducing new lines 

Such creat bonrovement hes 
recently been made with equip 

ant and on lity of wood: that 
the sale of their eonds bas wrest 
lv iner@ssed during the past 
year 

'-e eamnary is incorporate] 
ly Letters Patent dated Ow 
1931 as amended by Supplement 


The officials of the company 
ave: J A Sandgren, Pincher 
Creek, President; Wm The’, 
Dir 
ectors: § P Albertson, Formost 
J R Mackenzie, Redeliff;.C Ant 
berg, Golden Prairie, Sask. 
¢ Mr E Podesta, who has bee 
n a serious condition from blood 
poisoning for the past week, is 
vow greatly improved. “ 


Special Services in 
Gordon Memorial 


Holey Week Being Observed 
Commencing Monday 


Special Union Services are be- 
ing held in’ Gordon Memorial 
Chureh in conjunction with the 
Union Services being held’ in 
the Hat, when all the main de 
nominations are joined together 
in Holy Week commencing Mon 
*y March 72nd. Th Rev 
Rowan Rimming will bb. the 


speaker, All young peovle as 
well as the older ones are invit 
ed to these services. On Tues 
day Rev MS Bleckburn of St 
Johns Church, will be the speak 
or. On Wednesday the speaker 


‘Thursday.. Choir practice  wil- 
he as usual, : 

On Good Friday Service wil, 
be held at ll am. It is expect- 
»t Rey Willis Cann will be the 
*veaker, 

Commencing at 2 p m in Fit’, 
‘ve United Church Medicine 
}.at a ahree hour service of 2! 
‘te Cruches will be held. Rev 
f° V Ellison will be one of th. 
speakers, 

On Good Friday evening in 
the Gordon Memorial Church at 
»>pm. The Oberamergau Pas- 
sion Play will be presented 
through beautiful slides, Ths 
Service will be under the aus- 

ices of the Young Peoples Soc. 


Cattle in District 
Have Wintered Well 


Thousands Of Antelene Feting 


Pasture North 0 a0eu 


Tatest reports since’ the 
‘ther hashecome milder in 
‘ic te that the cattle hav 
“tered much better than was 

oucht There has been very 
loss of stock in this section an 
ep°rts are that they are in fair 

condition, 

The antelope have also winte' 


> ed well end it is reported thet 


thousands of them are runnin, 
on the prairie just north of town 
along the river, and are eating 
up an enormous amount of pas- 
turage. 

It is suggested by farmers 
and ranchers in the district that 
am open season be allowed for 
antelope or that the government 
remove them to an allotted res- 
ervation, : 


—__—_—_t__—— 


LOOK AT YOUR I ABED 


Committee Lays 
Plans For The 
Big Celebration 


Request for Financia 
Assistance Early 


*vecal 


A meeting of the executive 
cmnmittee appointed to arrange 
x the coronction was ‘eld iv 
‘he town hell Tuesday evening, 
avd several plns were made for 
the carrving out of a 
Gays program. 

Much of the suceess of th: 
secasion will depend up*n the 
“nancial assistance contributed 
‘yy the several local orrani.s.- 
tions, business firms and private 


complete 


mittee is anxious to have the 
contributions made as s90n at 
rus’iMe se that the 
ments foy the program may be 
completed at an early date. Ihe 
rembers of this cor. 
“ittee are JR MecKenzie W 
Hi and Dr Ward, who will be 
pleased to have the donations 
specified at once, Tle execu- 
{ive has decided that anv funds 
‘at over from. the celebration 
would he donsted to the oral 
Red Cross Asso. 

As the Coronation conflic.s 
with the dates set for the an 
nual school festival it hag beer 
decided by the exeeutive and 
school officials that the schoo! 
wll not take part in the fe-tivr] 
thig year. Instead their energ- 
ieg will be devoted to te coron» 
tion celebration in which the 
school children will take g prom 
irent part, 

There is a duel reason f° 
making this occasion a spe?! 
success as this year is the 25r- 
amiversary of the birth of Red 
cliff as a town. 

There is no doubt thee will 
he whole hearted co-»peration 
with all organizations in town 
in an endeayor to make this im- 
pel tant occasion a great success 


ral ra neve. 


— 


Notice to 
Quarry lodge Mcmbe's 


Officers and Members cf 
Quarry Ledge AF & AM will 
meet in the Lodge rooms at 1:30 
Sanday afternoon to attend the 
f.neral of the late Bro Wm Hen 
derson, ‘ Visiting 
welcome. 

J W Pickering W M. 


Members 


LATE WM, HENDEPSON 
vio passed away suddenly last 
iy at the age of 98 


even 


People’s League is 
Calied Noa-Political 


First Meetive Held in 
Wus Well Atte 


Calrary 
nded 


As a vecult of the 
eiled recently by the new polt'c 
eiled “the Peorle’s 
there : ppetrs to be 4 
fnrowiig interest in ti 


convention 


i] party 
earue”’ 
orrah 
ization by the general public 

At this meeting. held in’ Cal 
gary there were in attendarre 
from mining 
»reas, ranching districts, mixed 
farming districts, the 


professions ard busine 


representatives 


VATIONS 
Ses, all 
of 4! wn agreed that stens mu ¢ 


Albert from its present position 

Some ides of the rrowth and 
interest {* this oreanizaton mov 
he gleaned from the feet thot 
up till lest week it had 100,000 
members, The'U F A when i 
evune the election in 1921. hid 
»pproximately only 38,000 mem 
hers, 

At its fi st evecutive meetir.g 
The Peonle’s |eagrue had a re- 
ord attendance, 


<2 


World Wh at Surplus 
Is Growing Sma'hr 


Will Be Greatly Lowered By the 
End of ‘September 


The crop year basfou, and a 


half months to run. and Can 
i.da’s surplus is under 100 mil 
lion bushels while Areentine 


and Australia have 
n illion bushels surplu 


about 2.0 
ava'lahle 


‘or export and carrvover Tis 
Yves a tetel of .lers than 394 
n‘ilion bushels from there 3 
hig wheat e-portine countries 
This is net a laree supply w' en 
it is considered thet it will ne 
September hefore wheat is 


available from the 1987 Canai- 
ian crop, the 
hemisphere wil] not have 
ther harvest until 
e:nber. 


w! ile southey 
ano- 


next Dee- 


GOVT. TELEPHON? 
BADLY IN DE®T 


With a loss on operation of 
$288,797 during the fiserl year 
1936, the Alta 
had 


recorded: an accumuleted defie 


ending March 81, 
Covernment Telephones 
tu tat ate of $1,906,653.55, ac 
cording toa report of the denart 
ment tabled in legislatue 
Friday afternoon by Hon w A 


iatlow, minister of publie works 


the 


_ aud telephones, 


————e 


ives 


with George Ariess, Rone Ray 
Half Hour Bargain Beah wight 


eeeeereee 
SOCeeee ene 


eee eH ee ee eee ee 


Numger 16 


Reddliff’s Fine ‘ 
Old Gentleman 
lias Pasced Away 


My Wm Henderson Died Sudden 
ly Yesterday Evening 
Although he had passed his 
88th birthday only two months 
ago Mr Wm Henderson was ci 
joying fairly good health and it 
the hope of his many 


i ‘veind that he would reach the 


century mark. 

Only a few days ago decease ' 
contracted a severe cold which 
sradually grew worse and de« 
‘eloped into pneumonia, Be 
cause of his advanced age his 
weakened condition wg not” 
lle to withstand the severe 

train and he gradually grew 
worse until the news passed f-- 
ound that our esteemed” ard 
venerable citizen. .was “passing 
through the valley of the shud 
cw.” He passedaway at 7 

‘alock last evening, 

The |. te Mr Henderson was 
a gentleman of the old schovul. 
‘he kindly disposition, thought 
‘ulsess of others, bredth of: vis 
on, honesty of purpose intellig- 
nt knowledve of affoirs and 

‘3 fa'th in the Architect of the 
Lniverse, had endeared him to 
ili who knew him, 

Deceased leaves two daught- 
crs and one son, Mrs C J Wilson 

f Voncouver, MrsJ B. Clinteai 

: Duluth, and William of Red: 
cliff. a ‘_» 

The late Mr »Hendersopr was 
sore in Newtonville, -Qnt..<n — 
Jan-158th 1839, "=" = 

He came west to Redcliff in 
1912 and has resided here. ever 
His wife predéceased 
‘im on March 16th 1983, ~_ 

The funeral will take. place 
rom Gordou Memorial Church 
Sunday afternoon at 2:30. _ 

The body will be at his old 
home of Second St, from gan’ 
unday morning until 1:80 in 
ihe afternoon. 


a 


' CHURCH NOTICES 


ST. MARY'S CHURCH 
Mass will be cvlebrated on . 
the 3rd Scnday ef each month 
ai 8:30 a, m 
= .- 


ST. AMBROSE CHURCH 


Rev H. S Hamnett, Vicar 
lloly Communion, Is, @nd 
ud 4th Sundays at 9:00 am 
‘rd Sunday at 1l am 

Sunday School at 2°00 a m 
Evensong at 7:30 pr 


Slice, 


GORDON MEMORIAL 
UNITED CHURCH 


Rev. H. V. Ellison, Pastor 
1) a. m. Church Echool 
'1:15 a. m. Morning Worshir 
‘On m Evening Worship 


EASTER 


FARES 
ARE LOWER 


JNE-WAY 


FARE & QUARTER 


FOR ROUND TRIP 


Micimum Fare 260 nts 


MARCH 25th toe 2 p. m. 29h 
Return ‘ir. it March 20 
for full Particulars Ask 
Canadian Pacific 


Another Boom Coming? 


A warning against an impending boom must appeal somewhat in the 
eategory of an anomaly to Western Canadians at the moment, yet there | 


are not lacking signs that what might ultimately prove a real disaster is | 
tn the making’ on the North American continent and more than one author- 
ity is predicting it and shaking an admonitory finger 


The attitude of admonition and warning is inspired by memories of} She spoke in faultless English | 
the grand orgy of 1928 and 1929 and its refiex debacle when values were from her heme ti Guumasmmovhtioh of 
wiped out overnight followed by a protracted and painful passage through the third annivetwary of China’s | 
ae VenEye oF Cepresion “new life’ movement—a plan she 

Those who profess to see another boom in the offing, and some of them | jaunched with Generalissimo Chiang 
are eminent and authoritative economists and statisticians, are not fearful) xoji-snek, her husband and China's 
of an era of prosperity founded upon the properly co-ordinated functions political leader for a moral re- 
of demand and supply, of the application of sound business principles to| awakening of the country. i 
production and distribution of needed commodities, but what they -fear, and China's “warlord era. with ite at- 
possibly with reason, is a repetition of the, wild and unfounded enthusiasm | tenant civil strife,” she declared, “is 
which led to a mad scramble to buy stocks at fictitious pricts, to a boost nearing an end because public opin-| 
in the prices of Commodities beyond their real value and to an unparalleled | jinn opposes those who want. to et: | 
orgy of speculation, all more or less based on the desire of the participants } 


to reap where they had not sown and to “get something for nothing.” 


To this spirit which raged across the continent like an unbridled prairie) 


fire must be attributed the boom which preceded the profound collapse of 


the autumn of 1929 and the severity and lengthy duration of the period ot) 


penitence and suffering which ensued. . 

The question which is agitating the minds of exponents of safe re- 
covery based on sound business methods is whether or not the victims of 
the depression from which the people are only just now emerging have 
remembered and will heed the lessons which this season of trial should 
have taught them, or are they and their successors going: to one more cast 
all discretion to the winds and again induige in a riot of speculation and 
inflation leading to another depression which may be worse than ever? 


Hoping for the best but fearng the worst, these authorities who are) 


prophesying another boom and issuing stern warnings of the ultimate con- 
sequences should their fears be realized, are basing their conclusions on 


the fact that large sums of accumulated money are seeking an outlet, that) 


THE REVLEW, 


Madame Chiang Kai-Shek Brond- 
casts Address In Faultiess 
English 


Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, China's. 


‘first lady”, made radio history as 


he first Chinese woman to address) 


| a world-wide audience. 


| tle differences with the sword, Na-! 
| tional unity is here because the -peo-| 
| Ple demand it. 
| “For a... decade Generalissimo | 
Chiang Kai-Shek devoted himself to 
unifying scattered armed forces into 
a nationAl army. Now he is seek- 
ing economic advancement.” 


factor in the economic progress of | 
China .and said motor buses now 
were busy in a eran 


WAKE UP YOUR 


| 


She stated highways were the chief) 5 


LIVER BILE— 


And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the 
Pence + dished a 


raw materials and finished products are required in enormous quantities to| 
replace the ravages of decay and obsolescence of the depression era and 
the superabundant optimism and fortgetfulness of human nature which is) 
80 apt to make desire the parent of decision, to paraphrase a well known 


| toes, 
| strawberries he placed 


legend. 

One of the authorities who fears the imminence of a period of over- 
expansion, followed by a depression so sevete as perhaps “to shake civil- 
ization” is Roger W. Babson, well-known business statigtician. 
on the subject he points out that the business pendulum in the United 
State has swung back to normal and outlines steps which the government 
of that country has taken in tife 


another business cataclysm, but questions whether the brakes will hold in) 


the event of a runaway. 
Mr, Babson appropriately points out that legislative and regulatory 
safeguards are of doubtful value if they run counter to the mob spirit and 


is pinning his hope to a spiritual revival as a safety valve and effective 


preventive. Undoubtedly hé is right in his belief that such a revival would 
be far more effective than any man-made laws and control measurés. 


But no matter how neighbors across the Jine or residents of Fastern 


Canada might yield to the lures of an inflationary bodm, no matter to what 
extent they may succumb to a temptation to “whoop it up" again, it ap- 


pears incredible that citizens of Western Canada could so soon be induced | 


to participate, let alone aid in promoting another speculative debauch, The | 
wounds and sores left by the last one must to be too fresh and tender for. 
that. 


No, it must be assumed that Western Canadians will be content enough | 


to feel their feet once again firmly on the ground without trying te soar on) 
precarious wings to dangerous heights, at least for some considerable time} 


to come. 


Siitad Stomach 


Rare Operation Is Performed In Al BBC. setitieaes Following Flood 
Montreal Hospital Of Complaints 
A middie-aged woman was on the| ‘The ‘British Broadcasting Corpora- 
way to recovery in a Montreal hos-| tion has ordered the greatest in- 
pital after an operation for one Of) ternal “clean-up” in its history. 
the rarest. cases of “upside-down; Broadcasting House has been in- 
stomach” in medical history. undated with complaints from lsten- 
Doctors said the 5i-year-old spin-| ers offended by certain items in re- 
ster, whose name was withheld) cent programs. Hence the “purge.” 
seemed to be progressing favorably; Captain Cecil Graves, Controller 
toward normal physical condition! of Programs, is to survey every de- 
following the 2% hour operation | partment in this campaign to “keep 
. that restored her stomach to its) the air clean.” A “black book” of 
right position and corrected the posi-' forbidden items. has already ‘ been 
tion of her heart, which had been! started. 
pushed far over to the right side of) “Broadcasting has no official ‘cen- 
ber body. sor because it has never needed one,” 
What made the case an extreme) one BBC official said. “We intend to 
rarity, hospital authorities said, waa ; maintain that reputation. Our re- 
the fact that the inverted stomach) sponsibility lies in the fact that we 
apparently developed in an ottier-| take programs right to the domestic 
wise normal adult, Babies are some-| fireside where all members of the 
times born with upside-down stom-| family are gathered,” 
achs, but the medical men declared Comedians’ “lines” are to be sub- 
the occurrence of such a condition in| mitted to the Light Entertainment 
a healthy adult was “most unusual.”) Director four days before the broad- 
There have been only 12 examples) cast, and two officials will scrutinize 
known to medical science. them. Plays which contain strong 
The surgeon in charge said the) ianguage are to be rigidly inspected, 
stomach certainly had turned over in| Even talks will not escape the 
the last eight years, and most likely) “clean-up.” Protests have also been 
within the last year. Last August, registered against realistic studio! 
the patient suffered a fall, and it was) “effects.” 
believed an outgrowth of that. Where doubt exists as to the pro-| 
~ priety of any item, it will be re- 
ferred for final decision to the De- 
portant Director concerned 


Makes Transport Safer 


Ordered A. ClesaUp 


New Field Crops Valuable 
With an average yield of 9.1 bush-/ 
els at an average price of 87 cents, | 
the 7,360,000 acres of Alberta farm 
land sown to wheat last year pro- 


' 
' 
' 
i 


duced 67,000,000 bushels with a total’ If Miying Conditions Over Air Routes 


return of $58,290,000. Compdrative) 
newcomers to Alberta's field crops,| 
peas and beans topped everything 


Are Well Known 


Ordinary prudence, to say nothing 


| ot the human element involved, 


in sight at an average of $1.50 a/| would seem to dictate the suspension | 


bushel. of air services over certain routes un-| 
til more is known of conditions that) 
Mount Rainier’s glacier system! are likely to militate against safe 


greatly exceeds that of any other transport, and until airmen are bet- 
peak in the United States. Twenty-| ter qualified to combat them with a) 


eight rivers of ice*efeep down its substantial expectation of success.| are unanimous that the climate off into a loaf pan; add 
jc vertainly the continued growth of | this city is too damp for mummies. | 


sides throughout the year. 


| fatalities is destined to create a very) 
| grave feeling of uneasiness among 
the public at a time when there is a 


And Rectal Soreness general desire that they should grow | 


oe eee ane yea with itch more and more “air-minded.”—-Mont- | 
fectal soreness, do not neglect the = = real Star. 


How To Overcome Piles 


In articles) 


hope of stemming the possibility ot | 


! 


REDCLIPF, ALBERTA 


9) 


; 


“BiG BEN 


GOES FURTHER 

BECAUSE EVERY 

eA CHEW LASTS ,, 
LONGER / 


ESI 


Chemist Believes Farmer Holds Solu- 
tion To Surplus , Problem 

Motor fuel will provide the solu- 
tion to Canada’s problem of surplus 
agricultural products, Dr. J. Allan 
Harris, research chemist, at the Uni- 
versity of British Columbia, believes. 

Motor fuel made from grain, pota- 
apples, pears, cherries and 
in the key 
position. Next he predicted building 
materials, rayon and lacquer made 


ite 
ba 


| Carter's Little 


leet up and up”. Harmless and 
make the bile flow freely. They 
of calomel but have no ealomel or 

them. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pill Pills = 
name! Btu 'y refuse anything elve. 25e, 


A t 


Francs’ s Declining Birth Rate 


| Population Has Been Jocreased By 
,» Advent Of Foreigners 

The annual number of births in 
France reached its maximum toward 
the end of the Second Empire, when 
it was as high as 1,034,000,in 1868 
In 1934 it had fallen to 677,000 and 
| in 1935 to about 650,000, of which 
nearly 50,000 were the children of 
| foreigners. The birth rate has there- 
fore diminished by 384,000, or nearly 
a third, although the population has 
increased since 1868 by three million 
immigrants q naturalized persons, | 
which has resulted in increasing the 
population from 38 to 48 million in- 
habitants. During the period 1900- 
35, the birth rate has decreased by 
nearly 100,000, The number of births | 
per marriage had decreased even | 
more rapidly, In 1800 the average | 
number of births in France was 4.5)5 

per marriage, at the end of last cen- 

soe geet today only 2.2, or a 
diminution of about 50 per cent. 
From Nature, 


"Self Preservation 


Torento visitehen Says Average 
Man Does Not Take Proper 
Care Ot His Health 

While golf is the finest game for 
men between 35 and 50; badminton 
is insane for every man over 40, un- 
leas he has been an athlete all his 
life, Dr. C. O, Young told the mem- 
bers of the Optimist Club of Toronto 
at their weekly luncheon at the 
Royal York hotel. 

Dr. Young said the average busi- 
nessman to-day took far more care 
of his automobile than he did of 
himself. 

“Too many of us,” Dr, Young con- 
tinued, “who come home after a 


| heated bridge game, smoke too nruch,| 


and the next day we start with a 

handicap. 

tension.” 
In his opinion, Dr. Young added, 


bridge. 


Egyptian Mummies 


Pharaohs Of anaes Egypt May Be 
Returned To Original Tombs 

The fate of the Pharaohs of an-| 
cient Egypt is being considered by| 
| the Egyptian Government and the) 
| shriveled mummies of the kings, 
now in the Cairo Museum, may be) 
| returned to their tombs. Experts) 


| 


Replacing the mummies in their 
original resting places in the famous 
Valley of the Kings is considered the 
happiest solution of the problem. 


| The British Museum of London is 


| and dahlias would produce sugar. 


| plus agricultural product. 


heavy day at the office get into a) 
|or perhaps take one drink, too’ many, | 


It is all due to a nervous) 


poker was far more relaxation than) 


from hay and straw. Artichokes 


A blend of only 10 per cent. would) 
account for 50,000,000 gallons of al-| 
cohol and remove 28,500,000 bushels | 
of grain each year from the annual 
surplus, the professor. said. In ad- 
dition to the above mentioned al- 
cohol can be distilled from any sur- 


With a reference ‘to dwindling ex- 
ports the young scientist observed 
that “even if everybody stuffed 


| themselves the collective stomachs 


of the world are not large enough 
to absorb all the farm products of 
to-day.” 

Scientists look upon the farmer 
as a primary producer, not only in 
the first commodity of life, food, but 
in the first phase of industry, raw 
materials, he said. With decreasing 
natural resource, they expect agri- 
culture to produce the bases of prac- 
tically overyiniog. 


~ .— 


SELECTED RECIPES 


SPICE BREAD 
Temperature: 350 degrees F. 
Time: 35 minutes. 

% cup shortening; 1144 cups brown 
sugar; 2 cups Royal id flour; 
1 teaspoon baking soda; 2 
baking powder; 1, teaspoon salt; 2) 
ge cinnamon; 1 rey nut- 
%& cup sour milk; % cu La 
walnuts; 1% cups 


a: the shortening and gradu- 
which has 


pan 9’ x12" which has been lined 
with waxed paper, Ice with caramel 
icing No. 1. 


CARAMEL ICING No, 1 

1 cup brown sugar; 1 tablespoon 
butter; 4 cup cream; 1 tablespoon 
coffee; icing sugar. 
Mix together the brown sugar, 
butter and cream in a frying pan. 
Stir until ar is dissolved and 
to raj boil. Boll two min- 

utes exactly from the time the whole 
mixture breaks into a boil. Remove 
from heat' and add 1 table n 
strong coffee, Beat in sifted — | 

sp 


sugar until mixture will 
easily. 
Recipe by Mildred Mae MacKenzie 
Copyright. 


JELLIED SANDWICH SALAD 


cup boiling water 

Lemon jelly powder 

cup Crown Brand Corn Syrup 
cup mild vinegar 

teaspoon salt 
teaspoon peppe: 
tables; 


ee. 


Fee 


chopped pimento 


~ 


ne ee to 


cup peas 
cups shrimps, or chopped cook- 
ed ham, 

| Method: Pour boiling water over 
jelly powder and stir until dissolved. 
| Ada Crown Brand Corn Syrup, vine- 
| gar, salt and pepper. Let stand until 


set; etables 1 
ull ag 


mix well. Pour 
filling of shri 
or ham. Cover with remaining hait 


‘of vegetable mixture. Let stand 
|until firm; unmold on a bed of let- 
| tuce and serve with Maaols dressing. 


Fe 
St. Peter's church, Wiltshire, 


BIG BEN 


THE PERFECT 


Chewing Tobacco 


Study Evolution Theory A Valuable Tablecloth 


Scientists To Make Heme With Apes| Has First Sketch Of London Tower 
In Jungles Of Siam Bridge On It 

In hopes of catching a glimpse of Has your tablecloth a sketch of 

man in the making, seven American) the London. Tower Bridge on it? If 

scientists will make their home for) it has then send it to the City of 

the next nine months with the an-) London Corporation. Whtn the plans 


thropoid apes in the jungles of Siam, 
Borneo and Sumatra to make close 
observations of the life, habits and 
behavior of the subhuman species in 


for the bridge were being considered 
Sir Horace Jones, the city architect, 
sketched his idea on a blottingpad. 
Later in the day he went to a ban- 


Add) “Blue” during the manoeuvres, 


their natural environment, it is an-/quet and elaborated the idea by sketch- 
nounced by Harvard University. ing it om the tablecloth. The bilot- 
The expedition, which aims to fill| ting-pad which bears the first sketch 
in some of the important gaps in the! of Tower Bridge is now preserved in 
jigsaw of human evolution, will In-| the Guildhall. The tablecloth; too, 
clude learned acientists. was though what has be- 
The scientists believe that by ob-| come of it is a mystery. Now the 
serving man's immediate ancestors; Corporation is looking for the table- 
as they live in groups in their native| clth, which was used at a banquet 
habitats they may obtain ving evi-| in 1877. 
dence of man in the process of evo- 
lution at a stage millions of years) 
before he finally émerged. It is 
hoped to find missing links in both 
the physical and cultural aspects of 
man's slow evolution from ape to 
mari-ape, ape-man and finally man. 


own imperial responsibilities, and 
the defence of an Empire seattered 
over the world should not. devolve 
Manceuvres Of The British Heme pi S anae tens, tacpen, Aree 
And Melina 4 To ormer Dominions Secretary, deciar- 
Be ed in a speech supporting the Gov- 

shown ernment’s defence program.. 


For the first time manoeuvres of He said he refused to subscribe to 
the British home and Mediterranean) ine pelief that rearmament™ 


fleets are to be made the subject of 
a film which, it is understood, will 
eventually be released to the public. 

The film will be essentially “docu- 
mentary” in character, but will have) 


Film British Fleet 


ures into iron vessels can we afford 
heme. This will concern the a4-| continually to keep ours in brittle, 
tures of two boys who join the earthenware jars?” he asked. 


navy, from the moment they put on 
tLeir uniforms until they find them- 
selves under active service condi- 
tions, as shown tn the manoeuvres. 

The producer is Commander J. L. 
F. Hunt. He was the captain of the 
submarine in “Men Like These” and 
directed “White Ensign”. 

There are to be four cameras with 
the “Red” fleet and four with the 


The house of Rothschild was the 
first money-lending organization to 
operate on an extensive scale. Found- 
ed in Frankfort-on-the-Main, it had; Small 
subsequent 
Paris, London, and Naples. 


Foods that ordinarily stale quickly 
will stay fresh and tempting a sur- 
prisingly long time if you cover 
them with Para-Sani Heavy Waxed 
Paper. 

Your grocer, druggist or stationer 


has Para-Sani in the handy, sanitary 
prefer ai fweny" For those ~~ 
prefer a lighter paper put up 

sheet form ask for Ped 
“Centre Pull’ Packs. 


: | said to have the world’s largest col- | tand, has during that time also been 
The Pilgrim fathers made thelr} lection of coins and medals. There clerk, bellringer, verger, stoker and 


memorable landing on.the shores of| are more than 500,000 pieces in the! response leader at funercls. 


be secured at once. For this purpose get from; 
eny druggist. a package of Hemroid and use) 
Qs directed. This formula, Which is used in-} 
ternally, quickiy relieves the itching and sdre- 


America on a Friday. collection, the oldest having been | 
. made about 700 B.C. 

The United a consumes six 

times as much tea as it does coffee. 


so and aids in healing the sore, tender ‘= 
isa sician’s pre .! 
is Signy Tecunmentes Be is tasy to use Welding arcs burn at a tempera- 
fe " ae operation when Po * sesane ture of 10,000 degrees, hotter than 
ao pgm wee may be bad at 


' = A, EB. yw, the sun 2192 


i 


Fine, delicate furniture should not 


| be kept near windows, radiators, or. 


any place where sudden changes in 
humidity and temperature occur. 


| 


Warehouses at Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Winnipeg” 


England Is 


The 
Jand 


reconstructed 


Bank of Eng 


repository of the nation’s gold 


is being built to last 1,000 years 
When completed, experts says it will 
be virttiaily impregnable and the 
Strongest building in the Empire 

Work of rebuilding and strength 
ening the bank was begun in 1925 
For years workmen have toiled un 
@erground Now the upper part of 
the building is nearing compietion. 

A éracksman would find his first 
obstacle after gaining entrance to 
the building would be penetration 
of a wall of solid concrete, 50 feet 
deep and eight feet thick, between 
him apd, the treasure in the vaults 
He woull find each concrete block 
“keyed” to its neighbor--a defense 
#0 ‘strong that experts believe the 
banks main vaults could withstand 


concentrated bomb attacks and 
enormous charge of dynamite. 
Beyond this wall--at the end of a 


dark and winding corridor studded 


an 


Reconstructed Bank Of 


Said To Be | 


Empire’s Strongest Building 


| 


} 


} Atlantic Air Liners 


Rochéster Firm Building ‘Planes Of 
Almost Unbelievable Size 

A short time ago we called atten 
tion to the “hush hush” bombers 
which the British government 
constructing under the most 
That the 
manufacturers are making enormous 


are 
secret 


conditions commercial 


strides is illustrated by the news 
which is no secret at all—that Short 
Brothers, of Rochester, who have 


made some of the largest planes in 
the world building passenger 
air liners of almost unbelievable size 
the coming At 


are 


and equipment 
lantic service. 


for 


These planes have a wing spread 
of about 100 yards and a length of 
75 yards, nearly the size of a coastal 
passenger ship. They will carry 
from 80 to 100 people and will have 
a cruising speed of 250 miles per 


with foot-traps. which set alarm | NOUr: ad ee yg gn a8 . 
bells ringing--are double steel grilles P etsy Bre apogee | oo 
capacity they could fly half way 


with two-inch steel bars, then other 
doors of steel, each weighing 18 
tons. 

These, which open at a light touch 

if you know the way 
access to the treasure house. 
one step within the door 
armed detectives running 
scene. 

Miles of alarm wires thread their 
way through underground passages 
of the bank, armed patrols are al- 
ways on duty near the bullion rooms, 
new and secret devices are a con- 
stant trap for the unwary. 

Invaders of the vaults could be 
trapped and drowned at the touch of 
a button, for thousands of gallons of 
water can be poured into strong- 
rooms as a two-fold protection 
against burglary and fire. 
water-system is controlled from 
three points—from a secret point in- 
sife the bank, from Scotland Yard, 
and from the governor's house 10 
miles outside the city. : 


brings 
to the 


So strong are the 50 vaults that! 


it bas been estimated 100 cracks- 
men would take a full year to pene- 
trate them, even if there were 
guards or alarms. 

There are long horizontal slits 
high up in the outer walls of the 
building, from which machine-guns 
could dominate the surrounding 
streets if ¢ver a siege were at- 
tempted. 

A gallery runs around the top of 


rio 


give direct) 
But} 


This 


around the world without refueling 
There will be seats of the swivel 
| chair type for passengers in the 
wings. Passengers will sleep in 
staterooms, there will be bath-tubs 
and a dance hall. 

These are the kind of planes Bri- 
tain will put in operation next year 
Ten years from then it would be hard 
to prophesy what the planes of that 
day will be like, Probably they will 
be “Queen Marys” of the air carry- 
ing hundreds of passengers across 
| the Atlantic, breakfasting at Mont- 
real or New York and having eve-| 
ning dinner in London or anywhere 
else in Europe._St. Thomas Times- 
Journal, 


Foolish Speculation 


People Of Small Means Should Keep 
Out Of The Stock Market 


A merchant told us the other day 
| of a customer who had just inform- 
ed him that he would not be paying 
his bill this month because the 
money was going into oll stock, 
From another quarter we heard of 
a lady who had offered to sell seme 
property for a quarter its real value 

to raise money for a fiyer in the 
oil market. This, we think, is em- 
phatically the sort of money that 
should not be used for speculation. 
| There are people-—such as the 
| successful oil companies--whose_nat- 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFE, 


a & 


Rose Afghan Blocks Join in TwoW ays 


ALBERTA 


Effective 
Crocheted 
in Three 


Colors 


PATTERN 5757 


Here's an afghan you'll really use 


design is always effective. 


endlessly! The ever-popular rose 


It's crochet of the simplest; just da a number 


of the 7‘% inch blocks (theyre all the same) then lay them side by side, to 


determine which of the joining arrangements you prefer 
If you use Germantown for this 


effective. 


afghan. In pattern 


color suggestions. 


Kither one is 
you'fe assured a fluffy, soft 


5757 you will find directions for making the afghan; 
an illustration of it and of the stitches used 


material requirements, and 


To obtain this pattern send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) 
to Household Arts Dept., Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 MceDermot Ave. | 


E., Winnipeg. 


There is no Alice Brooks pattern book published 


Clever Talking Bird 


Minah Entertains Thousands 
Visitors At London Show 

In a corner of Dorland hall, Re- 
gent St., where the management of 
the Crystal Palace opened its 69th 
national show of cage birds, a bird 
with a yellow bill entertained thou- 
sands of visitors with its powers of 
speech. 

“I'm a minah. What's your name?” 
it asked, in a well-marked Glasgow 
accent, 

A woman replied, “Mae West.” 


| 
} 


Of Car Starties Them 


Rocky Mountain Sheep 


Less 
Man Walking 

Rocky Mountain sheep are steadily 
decreasing in the Park, at Banff, and 
where formerly there were hundreds 
of them to be seen in the winter 
time, now there are but two groups 
in evidence. One herd ts to be seen 
on the west road About three miles 
from Banff,-and the other one ranges 
hearer town, There are seven sheep 
in this group and one strange fact 
noticed about these wild sheep is 


Than A 


The minah threw back its bead that they seem to be more afraid of 
and indulged in a long and deep- a man on foot than they are of a! 
throated chuckle, After a long|car. At the first sign of a person 


pause it said: “Minah's not a bit 
happy. Give me an apple.” 

Then, recovering its good humor, 
it gave a good imitation of the laugh 
of the lonely Australian kookaburra, 
or laughing jackass, in the next cage. 

It is claimed the minah, which is 


approaching on foot they are off like! 
a shot, down the mountain side and 
away up the west road on the gallop, | 
generally taking to the middle of the! 
road for faster travelling 


Viewed from the stratosphere, ac- 


the property of A. Wilson of Glas- cording to filers, .this terrestrial 
gow, a fellow of the Zoological sphere is a deep purple. You can 
society, is the best talking bird in scarcely blame Mother Earth these 
the world days if she develops symptoms of} 
apoplexy i 

Naojiro Kata, winner of the cham- . i 
pionship contest for the longest and) Confetti at * weddings has been | 


most beautiful beard in the Japanese 
Empire, is five feet one inch tall, five 
inches shorter than his beard 


banned by the Rev. 8S. N. Dudley of 
Lincoln, England, who will permit 


Proper Conservation Of 


Health Will Assist In Adding 


To Expectancy Of Life 


Belief That Dies Hard 


Most People Think Moon Has Some 
Mysterious Power 

Belief in the mysterious power of 
the moon over mankind dies hard 

Many doctors claim that the effect 
of the moon's rays is wwiderable 
though the natter has We ry 
little investigate ertain! many 
beliefs about the mo ive still 
here and there saves a rresp i 
ent of the Dally Ma r t n this 
hard-headed age 

Most people dislike seeing the new 
moon for the first time through a 


pane of glass; it is supposed to bring 
luck. On the other hand, it is 
considered lucky to 
when you 

the 
during 


bad 
silver in 
and 


have 
your pocket 
counted at 


see it, 
money new moon is 
to the month 
It is lucky to turn your money over 
in your pocket at the new moon. 
Country folk in many parts of} 
England still wait for the new moon! 
before they plant certain seeds, be-| 
lieving that the plants will increase) 
as the but will have} 
little chance of growth if planted! 


said increase 


moon waxes, 


when the moon is on the wane. } 

In Devonshire you are likely to be} 
warned against cutting your hair and 
nails unless the moon is past the full. | 

There has always been a strong 
belief—among all peoples—-in_ the 
sympathetic connection between the 
waxing and waning of the moon and 
the growing and finishing of human 
affairs. In the Orkneys there ts still) 
strong preference among young peo-| 
ple to marry when the moon fs new,| 
for the new moon is the symbol of 


all happy beginnings. Similarly, 
country people often wait to cut 
down their trees or scythe thetr) 


grass until the full moon is past, and 
the proper lunar season for finish- 
ing things has begun. 

Few people will sleep in the full | 
light of the moon without @ super-| 
stitious qualm, and even doctors will 
say that full moonlight can have! 
curious physical effects on suscept- | 
ible people. People still tell tales of} 
sailors being found dead or blind) 


from sleeping on deck on nights of! 


full 


Change Is Advisable 


Gardeners Should Rotate Position 
Of Vegetables For Best Results 
A gardener needs a plan of his 


| more 


| (1931) 


moon, | 


With adequate community rgar 
zation and personal scipline de 

ted to the conservation f he } 
the fostering of fitness, the preven 
ton of disease and thé curing of 
ness, it is not too r h to ? 
that some day the expectat f 
life at birth may be 70 years man's 
allotted span-—states a edi 


message 


thro 


prepared 1 clea 


iwhout Canada by the Health 


League of Canada 


Between a third and a half of the 


annual illness in Canada is prevent 
able, the Health League asserts. Yet 
it is still with us 

The longevity of the people has 
increased fh Canada as in other 
countries, the educational message 
reads We are becoming literally 


an older nation. This does not mean 
that our chances of living to 100 are 
much better We are 
extreme old age our 
fathers, but more of us are surviy- 
ing the risks of death in infancy, 
childhood and young adult life. It ts, 
then, the average length of life that 
has been extended 

The latest 


not living to 


than 


estimate for Canada 
places this average expecta- 
tion of life at birth for men at 59% 
years, and for women at 61% years. 
This record compares fairly with 
that of other countries. The follow- 
ing most recent statistics for 
and women combined are not strictly 


comparable because they do not 
correspond to the same years 
Years 
New Zealand (1931) 66% 
Holland (1921-30) nearly 63 ° 
Sweden (1926-30) -. 6 
Denmark (1926-30) nearly 62 
Australia (1920-2) esses @ 
United States (1933) 61 
Germany (1924-6) .......... 57 
Ttaly (1930-2) 55 
U.S.8.R, (European. area 
1926-27) 44 
Japan (1921-5) 42 
When contrasted with conditions 


in the sixteenth century in Geneva 
when the average length of life was 
21 years, these figures suggest that 
there are some advantages of being 
born in the troubled 20th Century. 

| Tt will be readily seen that this 
| average expectation of life at birth 
| forms a most exact index of hygienic 
} and social conditions’ For example 
| in England the average life expect- 
j ancy in the past century has risen 
| from 41 years (1836-54) to 59 years 


men | 


this wall where patrols could keep ural business it is to prospect for oil. 
watch in a time. of emergency. | There are funds-—such as the sur- 


Barkless Dogs From Africa 
Are Cat-Like In Appearance And 
. Will Grow! Gently 
Barkless dogs--Basenjis from the 
heart of Central Africa—have been 
exhibited to London dog fanciers for 


the first time in any civilized land. 
Great crowds assefibled around 


Bongo and Bereke and their eight’ 


puppies at Cruft's annual dog show 


much easier and more exciting to) 
in Agricultural Hall, London, where gamble than to save.--Calgary Her- 
4,332 dogs, valued at $5,000,000, were) 014 
exhibited. The Basenjis were the: 
rarest breed there. They were. 


brought from Africa by’ Miss Olivia 
Burns, who sold them at good prices 
and. was rushing more by airplane. 

Generations of dusky 
‘who use them to chase game, taught 
them not to bark. Finally evolution 
stamped out their bark altogether, 
‘although they growl gently. 

The Basenjis, hardly larger than a 


fox terrior, average about 22 pounds) 


each in weight. Yet they chase lions 
and other ferocious game. 


Cat-like in appearance, they wash) 


their faces with their paws and.arch 
their backs when angry. Carvings 
of similar dogs appear on the facades 
of Egyptian tombs, 


Few Can Manage It 
About $1000 Hequired Yearly To 
Outfit Well Dressed Man 

The average 
$1,000 annually clothes, 
be well dressed he should spend at 
least $4,000, Raymond Twyeffort told 
delegates to the the 
National Association of Merchant 
Tailors of America. To demonstrate 
what he termed a few of the “neces- 
sities’ in the man's wardrobe, Twy- 
effort pointed to an exhibit including 
@ green tuxedo and hat to 
match, an opera with scarlet 
satin lining, and a strawberry out- 
ing coat with red and black striped 
trousers 


man should spend 


for and to 


convention of 


coat 


cape 


Miidew be removed 
clothes by soaking them in 
milk 


can from 
butter- 
then hanging them in the sun 
He who laughs—lasts 


Readers Digest 


Says the 


masters, 


| plus savings of debt-free and pros-| 
| perous citizens—which should quite) 
| properly be available to finance such 
exploration. The tragedy of any 
| boom is that it usually goes on long | 
after the legitimate speculator has 
‘deemed the risk too great for him 
and got out, 

The cannon-fodder of the stock 
| market are the little people who are 
tempted to go on and on for the 
very human reason that it is so 


Maintenance Of Prisoners 


Average Cost In Canada Pstimated | 
At $2.33 Per Day 

The per capita daily cost of main-| 
tenance of prisoners in Canadian) 
penitentiaries ranges from $4.43 at 


Collin's Bay down to $1.74 at King-| 


ston penitentiary, Hon. Ernest La-| 
pointe, minister of justice, indicated | 
in a reply tabled in the House of! 
Commons. z 

The average cost for all 
tiaries is $2.33. Others are: St 
cent de Paul, $1.85; 
$2.11; Manitoba, $2.84; 
umbia, $3.58; 


peniten- | 
Vin- 
Dorchester, 
British Col- 
Saskatchewan, $2.56. 
The highest at Collin's Bay 
was partly due to capital expendi- 
tures on buildings and equipment, | 
the last annual report of the super-. 
intendent' of penitentiaries shows. 


cost 


“Locomotive engineers are often | 
afflicted with an excruciating type of 
facial neuralgia resulting from draft 
in the Another 
of torture undergo is 
tries to 


driver's cab.” 
they 
motorist 


form 
when 
race a 


some fool 


train to a level crossing 


The sun's rays contain electricity 
and if we had to pay only four cents | 
a kilowat hour for that which the 
earth receives, we would owe the 
sun $160,000,000,000,000 @ day. 


Aesop created the idea for the em- 
blem on the American dime. The 
moral of many of his stories was “in 
union there is strength.” 

Drinking water is apt to contain 
more oxygen in winter than in sum- 
mer. 2192 


only rice to. be thrown in his church. 


THEY'RE TWINS BUT NOT SISTERS! 


sinners 


| 
| 
| 
| 


; 
i 


_ ee 


Once in 40,000,000 births, according te science, there occurs such a co- 
incidence as was recently revealed in Detroit where two 17-year-old high 
school girls, both named Pauline Taylor, are “twins”, but not sisters! 
Pauline Taylor on the left was born Sept. 22, 1920, at St. Ignace, Michigan, | 
just two hours before the stork arrived at St. Catharines, Ontario, with 
Pauline Taylor on the right. They became acquainted as classmates at a 
Detroit school three years ago and have been inseparable since. They are the 
same weight and height, dress alike. and are go similar in looks and tastes 
that they are practically indistinguishable. ‘ i 


work just as much as does a house| (1828). This rise is but the reflec- 


| builder. If gardén plans are kept| “on of deaths prevented by the im- 


‘from year to year it will enable the 


grower to keep track of the rota- 
tion of the vegetables. Notes made 
on the garden plan each year will 


also prove a source of reliable in- 
formation when the new plans are 
made. In planning the 1937 garden 
it is well to change or rotate the 
position of the vegetables that were 
planted last year, This is desirable 
to prevent exhaustion of certain food 
elements from the soil and to check 
the spread of insects and diseases, 
A safe plan is to follow leaf crops 
guch as lettuce with root crops like 
beets 6r carrots, or fruit crops such 
as beans, peppers and tomatoes. 

If the garden is large it may be 
divided into equal parts, planting 
one half to some legume crop such 
as clover. Always plough the crop 
under before the plants become 
woody. 
tire garden to rye every fall, It 
should be turned under the next 
spring before it reaches the first 
joint stage. A garden in which both 
rye and the legume crops are used 
regularly will be much im- 
proved in producing power. 


Solid Gold Throne 


-_—— } 


soon 


| Nizam Of Hyderabad,<Seid To Be “* 


Richest Man In The World 
Tributes of gold and silver were 


| added to the fabulous wealth of the 
| Nizam of Hyderabad, richest man in| 


the world, in honor of the ailver 
jubilee of his reign. 

The Nizam, seated on a throne 
carved out of solid gold, received the 
gifts at a durbar in the most bril- 
liant pageantry of the week of cele 
bration. 

The spectacular durbar dress of 
embroidered silk, jewelled in all 
colors with a mitre-like headdress. 
worn by the Nizam’s subjects con- 


| trasted strangely with Nizam’s own 


simple grey frockcoat and 


white silk headdress. 


plain 


A Novel Footstool 
Do you know that you can make 
unique foolstools out of the single 
spring seats of an old autmobile’? 
Cover the old seat with uphoistery 
and attach castors at the fdur 
corners. This will give you a com 


fortable fireside seat or footstool 


Some growers. sow the en-| 


| proved medical services, the new 
| public health services, and the ex- 
| tended methods of social ameliora- 
tion which have been developed dur- 
| ing that 100 years. 
| ‘The Canadian reports show a simi- 
| lar record of prolonged life. In On- 
| tario, in 1885 the Provincial Board 
of Health had just been formed three 
| years. A comparigon between con- 
| ditions then and after 50 years of 
| organized public health effort ts re- 
| vealing, In Ontario Typhoid fever 
in 1885 caused 462 deaths, in 1935 
there were 38 deaths, Diphtheria's 
| 1885 death toll of 1,006 has been re- 
duced to 33 in 1935. Tuberculosis of 
| the lungs has been cut in more than 
| half from 2,318 deaths in 1885 to 
| 1,006 deaths in 1935. And these re- 
| ductions were made while the pro- 
| vinelal population doubled. 
| Jn Toronto in 1900, 880 babies died 
| before they reached their first year, 
| If they had been born in 1934 about 
600 of them would have been saved, 
|@uch has been the improvement in 
our infant care 
Such then are some of the 
victories of public health,” but the 
task is by no means over, Between 
44 to 44 of the annual illness in Can- 
ada is preventable and yet still with 
Four great principles 
guide us in its elimination 
1, Conserve health 
i 2. Foster Fitness 
| 3. Prevent disease 
4. Cure illness 
| With adequate community organ- 
| ization and personal discipline de- 
voted to these ends it is not tao 
much to predict that some day the 
expectation of life at birth may be 70 
years alloted span And 
the glory of this will not be in its 
length of years but in 
of a healthy life 


‘silent 


should 


man's 


the fuliness 


Luminous Sticks 


So successful here have been the 
| luminous sticks recently introduced 
in Paris for the use of blind people 
when out at night that the authori- 
ties are advocating their use in other 
parts of France r the 


laws. 


under safety 


According to some investigators 


the Atlantic is the youngest 
Pacific the oldegt of the 


and the 
oceans 


= | 


THR RENCLIFF REVIEW THURSDAY, MAR 18th, 1987 


: TTT , 
eteerte,_| EASTER || Used Barbed 


“maa amen, || NOVELTIES | Wire For Sale 


®& Canade and Great Britain .... 


a sat ’ = be Y 
—TRER TY 
ROP. | 

MAGAZINE 


We Paw the 


IOS Ee ey 
J 
L eS a5 
gn rat 
> Abie, 


Dadded Staten ...ccccccccceceee $2.50 We have an Hiv Pie p ; 
ms aug won “q at tt ‘loon 
Advertising Raves Furnisne! o All New Assortment r ‘ada! : 
a Ie an L, Sons, . wb tne for this Easter Season ; ror oCFep ea Canadian Magazine + 1 yr. 
THURSDAY, MAR 18th. 19&7 Make Your Selections | | E : i Bi 8 - Tyr. 
: it time for mailing ’ 3 : : s a pag 3 Pictorial Review + + + Tyr. 
| We will pack them up for you me aa : : ans ake és , : F , e Aled : cf Sovpah « + 6 6 Tyr. 
ready to mail to your friends | ; tabi : a | NY ; 4 With Amorican Boy «++ + Tyr. 
The Bank We have the Newest and Best || Car ae d sronte’ | i - Oma. 
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Can't ef Mer’s Ciner St | Auto Wreckers What could be more complete than « 
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west toa toe piping ont Gos SPECIAL IN PERMANENTS 


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REVIEW 


| 


° yaa | ease PONAIA IY : a on elias iicmniaen 
ra ¥ 


Created By Peace Lovers 


Horrible War Weapons Just Out 

growth Of Industrial Progress = | 

Who invented gunpowder? Ber-) 
thold Schwartz, a monk, if history 
reports aright. Who invented the 
submarine? No bloodthirsty naval 
officer, but harmless Bushnell, artistic 
Robert Fulton and gentle Holland 
Who gave us the mathine-gun’ Gat- 
ling, 4 physician, and Maxim, a 
Maine farmer. High explosives, case- 
hardened armor, tanks, lethal gases 
—all came from the ranks of civil- 
fans. The fire-breathing, saber-rat- 
tling soldier adopts such innovations 
reluctantly. When at last he con-' 
cedes the superiority of new weap- 
ons, the contemplation of which fills 
him at first with gentlemanly dis- 
approval, he resigns himself to the 
task of making them practical. On 
the whole he is an academic de- 
veloper of outside inventions rather 
than an originator himself. 

The truth is, however, that our 
means of destruction have been the 
natural outgrowth of industrial pro-| 
gress. Wher the metallurgist de-/ 
velops the process of cementation, 
the @rmor-maker is bound to apply 
it. Given what is called the “cater-| 
pillar” principle of locomotion used) 


ist will do his best to provide them, | 
whereupon the army and navy rep | 
in and. appropriate them. When | 
wireless is invented, the old sema-| 
phores are relegated to positions of | 
minor importance’ on warships. And) 
when the airplane at last reaches, 
the practical stage, general staffs, 


take notice and begin to think of|/Tecommended as an alternative driver was killed, poor fellow!” 


Olthes Moth Pest 


Methods Used For Controling These 
Destructive Pests 

A reminder that clothes moths are 
found in greatest numbers in thé 
spring and simmer is made by the 
timely re-issue of the Dominon De- 
partment of Agriculture circular on 
the methods of controlling these de- 
structive pests. Clothes moths cause 
enormous damage annually in Can- 
ada to materials such as woollens, 
furs, hair, and feathers, upholstered | 
furniture, carpets and many other) 
things. The damage is caused by| 
the feeding activities of the larvae,| 
or caterpillars, of the moths, not by! 
the winged moths themselves whose) 
principal function in life is to mate) 
and deposit the eggs from which the| 
larvae develop. 

The prevention of damage requires) 
the exercise of care, forethought, and) 
vigilance. Articles of clothing and 
other materials subject to attack 
should not be left undisturbed for 
long periods, particularly during the 


summer months, in such places an ~ 


cupboards, attics, and trunks unless 
adequate precautions have been 
taken to protect the articles from in-| 
jury by moths. The clothing and 
other articles, after being thorough- 


with paper strips. Enclosing cloth- 
ing in two thicknesses of strong 
wrapping paper, or several thick- 
nesses of newspaper, taking care 
that the edges are so turned that no 
moths may gain entrance, is aiso| 


reconnoitering from on high and|™easure of precaution. 


bomb-dropping. 


When carpets or rugs are suspect-| volvers and automatic pistols are 


Modern warfare owes its terrify-|¢d of being infested with moth 
ing modern character to so many|l@rvae, the carpets should be thor- 


vaged seed was freer from smut than 
was the crop produced from home- 
grown seed. 


Charlies Lamb, in his “Dissertation 
Upon Roast Pig.” This was another 
epoch-making accidental discovery 
that led eventually to the invention 
of the gridiron. 


The newspaper Seculo told how 
Alvaro Esteva, a Spanish manufac- 
turer with insurgent. sympathies, 
played dead in Malaga cemetery for) 
two whole months. 


| batloon. 


Senor Esteva said he hid in an 
empty coffin in the family tomb to} 
escape government troopers during| 
government domination of the sea-| 
port. He emerged when the insurg- 
ents took the town. 

Each night, he said, he heard the | 
screams of persons being executed 
in the graveyard. He subsisted on) 
food which his sisters concealed in| 
wreaths which they laid each day 
upon graves. 

His hair, jet black two months 
ago, turned a snowy white. 

Appear In Many Forms 

Rainbows appear in a multitude of 
forms. They vary in width, and in 
number and order of colors. A sheet 
of water, as well as a sun which is 


oughly cleaned on both sides with a 
vacuum cleaner. Vacuum cleaners 
may also be used for removing the 
lint from floor cracks, behind base- 


of clothes moths is given in the cir- 
cular which may be obtained free on 
application to the Publicity and Ex- 
tension Branch, Dominion Depart- 
ment of Agriculture, Ottawa. 


Duelling was unknown in Greece 
and Rome. It originated in Ger- 


yi 

Fs § 

Hye 
i 
is 
=F 
3 


<5 
é 
a 
& 


fi 
i 
i! 


Hamilton in Leicester Square, Lon- 
don, in 1741, 

Both combatants died from their 
wounds the same day. 

But the oddest duel ever fought 
was between two Frenchmen who 
were in love witli the same opera 
singer. 

One morning in 1808 they took off! 
in balloons from the Tuileries Gard- 
ens, each armed with a blunderbuss 
to pierce the envelope of his. rival's 


When théy were half a mile up 
both discharged their pieces. One of 
the ballons burst.and its occupants 
were dashed to bits—the other sailed 
safely away. 

That is the first record of a fight 
in the air. 

Omitted From Program 

A 82-page Coronation Day pro- 
gram has already been printed and 
issued to a restricted circulation. 
The handsome volume contains pic- 
tures and biographical matter of the 
Royal Family, but no reference is 
made of Edward, now living in Aus: 
tria. The Duke of Windsor is the 
only member of the Royal Family 
not mentioned. 


Whales can dive a mile below the 
surface and rise immediately, with- 
out harm A chemical adjustment 
of their blood cares for the variation 
in pressure. 


os: aS 


——— ET ee en 


Taken a few moments before the huge plane left the water, this picture shows the “Castor” about to leave 


Southampton Water en route to distant parts of the British Empire. This flight is over the “All-Air” route | 
which is now possible through the flying boats which can travel over vast areas of ocean without having much 


worry if forced to land on the water. 


Must Accept Responsibility 


Driver Should Regard Car As Pos- 
sible Instrument Of Death 


Tip For Public Speaker 
Leaving Résteneve y Sony He Stopped 


Whenever someone shoots someone, A race horse's reputation depends. 


or something. Hang the brute!” the course. A speaker's reputation 

But when someone, either by _— should depend on how few words he 
son of hard liquor, stupidity or seer) can use and still impress his ideas 
leasness, piles up a car and provides! on the minds of his audience. 
three .or four jobs for the under-| No speaker ever failed to leave 
taker, nearly everyone says “My, his audience sorry. They are either 
my, what a sad accident. And the! sorry that he sat down when he did, 
or sorry that he didn’t sit down when 
The point being that while re-| he didn't. There is no such thing as 
& speech exactly the right length. 
fairly well controlled, automobiles| There is no perfect stopping place 
and trucks are not as yet regarded 
by the law as possible instruments 
of death, not sufficiently, at least. or else it has had too much. 

Most any half-baked youth, or| Between the two extremes, it 
short-sighted individual, or nervous| would seem that every speaker 
person, or even & person subject to, would err on the safe side and make 
heart attacks can obtain a driver's) certain his speech would be on the 
license, The examination is perfunc-| short side instead of the long. Sad 
tory and the attitude seems to be| to relate, however, there are a dozen 


satisfied. It either hasn't had enough, 


“you can drive it, and heaven help| speeches too long to one that is too) dent. I am going down to Washing- 


you if you hurt anybody.” short. 
Until the public is made to realize| One cannot help but recall Irvin 
that there ts almost as much re-| Cobb's story of the public hanging 


applied the traffic death toll will con- 
tinue.—Kirkland Northern News, 


For Protecting Wild Duck 


London Police Are Alert 
purpose of protecting the wild| emeommnel 

program calls for rais-| Watching Private Agencies Selling 
sum Seats For Coronation 
Average price for a front seat for 


oF 


“Do you. serve crabs here?” 
Waiter: “Yes, sir. We serve any- 
body. What can I do for you.” 


A day's fog costs England $30,- 
000,000. 


HEALTH AND FITNESS CRAZE SWEEPS 


The 
gave up their farm work for a week to travel to England to put on these displays. 


because the audience is never exactly! sense enough to be frightened, while 


A Lincoln Story 
| How Famous U.S. President Won A 
Convert To His Cause 
While Abe Lincoln was on his way 
| to Washington to be Inaugurated In 
1861, his train stopped for a short 
| time in Wellsville, Ohio. 

A large crowd gathered and the 
homespun lawyer was making & 
speech from the rear platform when 
an inebriate in the crowd blurted, “T 
voted for a damn sight better man 
than you.” 

A man who had been used to many 
jibes, Lincoln did not let his polse 
become upset arid instead responded 
with, “I wart to meet that man; 
bring him to me.” 

Although intoxicated, the man had 


the crowd became tense with anticl- 
pation of the meeting. In a few 
minutes the man was face to face 
with the president-elect. 

Lincoln, still poised, looked at 
him a moment and then sald, “My 
friend, you didn't vote for me but I 
have been elected. I am your Presi- 


ton to tackle a very hard job and I 
need your help. Will you help me?” 

This overwhelmed the inebriate, and 
he replied. “Sure I will, Mr, Lin- 
coln, sure IT will.” 

All this overwhelmed. the crowd, 
too, and every one cheered—Cleve- 
land Plain Dealer. 


Average Loss Is Very Little Accord- 
ing To Tests . 

Wheat and oats stored in bina in 
good condition and kept free from 
rodents shrunk very little in storage 
according to tests made by the Ohio 
| Experiment Station. Over a five- 
year period, the average loss from 


| of one per cent. 
| with oats was less than two-tenths 
| of one per cent. 

| The moisture content of the grain 
| varied slightly from month to month, 
| depending on the condition of the 
weather, yet, at the end of the year, 
the moisture content had changed 
very little. P 


A magistrate has warned a de- 
fendant that wives are not furniture. 
| That ia so. For one thing the in- 
stalment people will ‘take furniture 
back. 


ee 


It would take thirty billion bil- 
lion billion electrons to make an 
ounce, according to estimates. 

— “+ 


EUROPE 


The Stone Of Destiny 


Removal To Bagland Has Always 
Rankled The Scotch People 

Scotamen are indebted to an An- 

flican clergymen—to wit, the Dean 


of Westminster—for the news that 
some time ago a plot was discovered 
to steal the Stone of Destiny. The 
police got, wind of the conspiracy and 
nothing came of it, but it makes a 


nice little “thriller.” Of course 
when Edward I. originally stole the 
stone, and took it to London, thers 


were no police in Scotland to stop 
him, and probably though there had 
been he would have taken his own 
way. But his depredation has rankied 
more bitterly with some sections of 
the Scottish people than any other 
unfriendly act performed by Eng- 
land. To steal the andlent stone, 
however, would have been a thor- 
oughly MWogical act, assuming that 
the intending perpetratora were per- 
fervid Scote Nationalists, So long 
as the Stone of Destiry is in Lon- 
don Scotland can claim to supply the 
basis of monarchy, for the British 
Kings are crowned over the Stone. 
Were the Stone spirited away, on the 
other hand, Scotiand would be so 
much the less represented at the 
Coronations. The conspiracy, indeed, 
seems to have been as silly and point- 
jess as that which some weeks ago 
resulted in the removal of the sword 


traditionally associated with William . 


Wallace from the memorial at Stirl- 
ing. From plots like these olf 
Scotia's grandeur emphatically does 
not spring, and the ingenuity and re- 
source expended in them could be 
more aptly applied otherwise for the 
good of their country,-Aberdeen 
Journal, 


We Are Informed That This Is At 
The Bottom Of Labor Troubles 


People who specialize in knowing 
all about emotions—members of the 


tions are at the bottom of labor 
troubles. 
“Most of us,” said John Levy, 


ployees to see thelr protesting be- 
havior as a resentment against an 
authoritative parent. 


a penny to understand and modern- 
ize the human machinery upon which 
all other aspects of its operations 
depend for success.” 


Opinien Of Halifax Man . 

If French architecture recal! 
champagne, and England's Georgian 
style suggests roast beef, and south- 
ern colonial reminds the observer of 
mint juleps, then Canadian architeo- 
ture is like pea soup. 

This observation was delivered by 
GC. A. Fowler, Halifax architect, in 
an address at a convention of build- 
ing men. His parallel, he said, was 
drawn in the belief Canadian archi- 
tecture'’s ingredients were quite as 
obscure as those of pea soup. 

Has Earned Rest 

One of the new arrival at Scot- 
land’s rest farm for horses is Mon- 
arch, @ pet pony which worked un- 
derground in a Northumberland coal 
mine for 20 years. During all that 
time Monarch never saw the light 
of day or felt grass under his feet, 
for never once was he brought to 
the surface Sis ° 


Due to the great caré used in re- 
fining and treating it, petroleum oil 
for lubricating watches costs hun- 
dreds of doflars a barrel. 


q 
z 
2 


i rig mani 


4 
: 


ipl 


4 . 
NEW CROP 


Unordered Merchandise 
No Obligation On The Part Of Re-) 
cipient To Return To Sender 

Few persons have escaped the) 
annoyance of receiving through the) 
mails such articles as ties, socks, | 
handkerchiefs and other merchandise | 
which they have not ordered and had) 
ho intention of buying, but which) 
they either pay for, go to the ex- 
pense of returning or worry about. 
They need not do any of these | 
things, according: to the Toronto) 
Better Business Bureau, which sends) 
out a circular deploring the re-) 
crudescence of this “racket and ad- 
vising the public how it may be dis- 
posed of. It seems the names of the | 
victims are taken from telephone | 
directories and the trade is well 
organized, It evidently succeeds to 
a profitable extent, or it would not 
be persisted in. 

Now here is the cheering informa- 
tion supplied by the Toronto Better 
Business Bureau. There is no obli- 
gation, it says, to buy the mer- 
chandise, neither need it be returhed 


THE 


Canada’s Radium Industry 

Is Now Established On A Regular 
Production Basis 

Discovery of important deposits| 
of pitchblende, the chief commercial | 
ore of radium, associated with rich 
silver ore was made at Great Bear 
Lake, Northwest Territories, in 1930, 
but it was not until the latter part 
of 1936 that development and ‘re- 
search had reached a point at which 
it could be stated with assurance 
that radium as a Canadian industry 
was established on a regular produc- 
tion basis. To obtain this status 
much progress had first to be made 
in four separate fields: mining, trans- 

portation, refining and marketing. 
In 1931, 20 tons of high-grade ma- 


terial from Great Bear Lake were). 


shipped to the Mines Branch Lab- 
oratories for experimental purposes, 
and the results obtained in the treat- 
ment of this trial shipment were so 
successful that a commercial plant) 
for the production of radium salts | 
was established at Port Hope, On-| 
tario. 


REVIEW, REDCLIFF, 


ALBERTA 


--Cnes 
In Last Fifty Centuries 

Chinese history is full of outstand- 
ing women, successive dynasties re- 
| cording thousands of the sex not- 
able in their various spheres, de- 
clares a pamphiet entitled “The 
Status of Women in China,” pub- 
lished by the Council of Internation- 
al Affairs, and translated by Jen Tai, 
a@ research Fellow of the Council. 

In 50 centuries, the pamphlet es- 
timates, China has produced 100,000 
| Women whose names still remain on 
| the scroll of fame for their achieve- 
ments. A great encyclopaedia of 
| 1727 named more than 28,000 wo- 
; men, leaders “in the 14 categories of 
womanhood." The T'ang Dynasty 
alone produced more than 800 wo- 


TWO WAY 


AT ONCE 


J 


; men writers, the Ch'ing Dynasty 
| more than 1,000. ‘ 
Some Authorities Think Hospital To-day, Jen Tai asserts, Chinese 


Patients Not Kept Quiet Enough | women have undoubtedly scored an 
Some authorities on the subject of | initial success in their effort to 
treating the ill are of the opinion achieve equality with men, “The 


Thousands Listed Among Notables | 


People Everywhere Are Adopting 
This Remarkable“ Phillips’’ Way 


The = to gain almost incredibly 
quick relief, from stomach condition 
arising from ee: is to alka- 
lize the stomach quickly with Phil- 
lips’ Milk of Magnesia. : 

You take either two teaspoons of 


to the sender, even when a stamped 
addressed container is enclosed. “If 


| that there is too much visiting per- 
With the mine at Great Bear Lake | mitted by hospitals. Some individ- 


and the refinery at Port Hope, more! uals cannot restrain their curiosity 


fact that many women have been 
able to serve the government and the 
society in various capacities with 


the liquid aah s after meals; or 
two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tab- 
lets. Almost instantly “acid —— 


Great Britain will greatly aug-) 
ment her fire-fighting forces as a 
precaution against incendiary air at- 
tacks, the House of Commons was 
informed. : 

The British labor minister decided 
to appoint a parliamentary commit- 
tee to study a plan for making paid) 
vacations mandatory for all British 
salaried workers. 

Captain James Mollison plans to 
fly films of King George VI.'s corona- 
tion in May from London to New 
York, in a plane to be built specially | 
for him, it was reported in London. 

Benito Mussolini, as minister of! 
war, has ordered a test mobilization 
of more than 1,000,000 men within | 
the next few months, an official com- 
munique announced, 2 

Windsor, Ont., forwarded to Wind- 
sor, England, $256 toward erection a 
memorial to King George V. in the| 
English borough. More than 17,000 
citizens contributed to the donation. 

Assurance of peace is needed for a 
lasting revival of world trade, Sir 
George Paish, British economist and 
international affairs expert, said in 
an address before the Montreal Cana- 
dian club. 

Stephen Salter, of Ryde, Isle of 

Wight, has bought a new pair of 
boots as he enters on his 102nd year. 
He walks near his home every day. 
Once he was builder of phe univers-| 
ity racing “eights’' of Oxford. 
_ Tearing down an old log house on 
his Brookdale farm near London, 
Ont., Russell Hardie found a coin 
minted just 100 years ago, a half 
penny bank token issued by the prov- 
ince of Lower Canada. 

A general labor shortage in the 


. United States during 1940 was re- 


garded as “highly probable” by the 
national industrial conference board, 
provided business activity continues 
increasing at a rate equal to that 
maintained between 1933 and 1936. 


Women Pilots Would Fly Coronation 
Films To America 

A special trans-Atlantic airplane 
flight is being planned in order to 
hasten delivery to North American 
motion-picture theatres of na~ 
tion films, 

Negotiations ave proceeding with! 
Amy Mollison, Beryl! Markham and 
other distinguished pilots, to under- 
take a flight to New York, accord- 
ing to Sir Gordon Craig, General 
manager” 6f the company which has 
been granted exclusive rights to film 
the ceremonies on May 12 (British 
Movietone News). 

Copies of the films will also be 
despatched to North America on the 
dirigible Hindenburgh, scheduled to! 
leave Frankfurt, Germany, late on 
the day of the Coronation. They will | 
be flown to Frankfurt. ; 

Mrs. Mollison and Mrs. Markham, 
both of whom have already con- 
quered the North Atlantic by air, 
have indicated their willingness to 
attempt the flight, it was stated. 

Canada will receive its copies of 
the films from New York by fast 
service 


Took No Chances 

Officers in San Antonio, Texas, 
found a mysterious bottle containing 
& yellowish fluid resembling nitro- 
glycerin. Gingerly, Capt. Cliff Ram- 
uchissel, explosives expert, carried it 
20 miles into the country and set it 
on a rock. Retiring a safe distance, 
he shattered the bottle with a shot. 
Further examination revealed the 
liquid was cough syrup. 


On @ clear day, an aviator two 
miles up can see objects 150 miles 
@way. ; 


Formic acid was made, at one time, 
by distilling red ants. 


@ qualified representative of the com- 
pany calls for payment or to take 
back the goods, the citizen is quite 
within his rights in demanding stor- 
age charges before turning the 
merchandise over to the agent,” pro- 
ceeds the stdtement. But the re- 
cipient of such goods is not entitled 
to appropriate them to his own use. 
He must, of course, “hold them for 
a reasonable length of time. 

The co-operation of the public would 
soon put an end to the nuisance, which 
is so detrimental to legitimate busi- 
ness. It is an impertinence to force 
unwanted goods on an individual in 
this way and there is already s0 
much literature of an importunate 
nature coming through the mails, 
that it is distressing to contemplate 
the growth of this movement by 
which an attempt is made to disrupt 
the business of the stores and the 
ordinary channels of trading. It can 
be immediately seen that the conse- 
quences of accepting such a method 
would be highly detrimental to the 
welfare of the .community.--Hamil- 
ton Spectator. ; 


Scientific Discoveries 
Mass Production Of Shoes That 
Really Fit Is Promised 
Elimination of staleness in bread, 
improvement of mass-production 
shoes that really fit and dental fill- 


ings that last, are among the new 
scientific discoveries ‘described in the 


of pork and bacon is linked with the 


due, as a rule, to poor keeping quali- 
ties of the bread. Investigations 
have shown bread made in the best 
possible way from the best flour will 
keep for 10 to 12 days, 


Will Likely Be Smokeless 


New Town Being Planned On Out- 
skirts Of Liverpool ' 

If present plans ave carried out a 
new, town to rise on the outskirts of 
Liverpool, England, will be free of 
smoke. It is to have 5,000 houses 
built at a cost of more than $5,000,- 
000, and sites are to be left for 
churches, @ moving picture theatre, 

centres, 


smoke to interfere with the airdrome 
near at hand. 


Enjoying Privacy 

Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh have 
completed their second year in Eng- 
land as refugees from the American 
tabloid and camera world, They have 
found the privilege of having private 
lives, an experience no longer allow- 
ed in America, quite enjoyable, says 
the New York Sun. 


The government of Northern Ire- 
land has guaranteed $1,000,000 to- 
ward the cost of constructing and 
equipping the new aircraft factory 
at Belfast. 


A “cast” coiri is made by pouring 
molten between two molds; a 
“struck” coin is stamped out of @ 
blank of gold, silver, nickel or cop- 
per bronze. 2192 


than 3,000 miles apart, the task of 
bringing the ore from the mine to 
the refinery presented a difficult sit- 
uation, especially as the mine is 
located 1,450 miles beyond the end 
of the railway line. By means of 
the navigable waters of the Mac- 
kenzie River system anq efficient and) 
economical air service it is now pos-| 
sible to freight concentrates out and 
equipment in between the railhead| 
at Waterways, in Northern Alberta, | 
to the dock only a few feet from’) 
the mine-shaft. 

By October, 1936, Canada’s radium | 
production reached two grams” 
monthly for the first time and on 
November 16 production of the first 
ounce (28 grams) was completed. 


Futitity OF Gas Masks | 


Scientists Make Tests Of Anti-Gas- 


when a friend is removed to the hos- complete equality and freedom, bears 
pital. The occasion is made a sort ample testimony to this statement. 
of gala one for an orgy of visiting; Compared with women of other 


; and many a patient has suffered| countries, it must be admitted that 


from the excitement and nervous! Chinese women are relatively inex- 
tension caused by seeing and trying perienced in the field of social activi- 
to talk to relatives and friends while | ties. Time alone will bring about a 
suffering from a malady that de- changed status for the Chinese wo- 
mands hospital treatment. men. It will not be long before they 
In most cases of illness, quiet and will catch up with their sisters in 
respite from exertion is requisite to the west. 
recovery. Where an excess of visiting) Leading women, the translator 
is permitted; no such outcome is pos- | finds, all agree it is necessary to re- 
sible. It is surprising that more tain portions of the old womanhood 
thought concerning that factor is which are congenial to the modern 
not given by hospital authorities, spirit and conducive to the develop- 
doctors and nurses.Sarnia Cana- ment of the new womanhood. “In- 
dian Observer. | deed, fashions may change, vogues 


Suicides In Tokio | is only one womanhood and that is 
: a ) to develop the woman along her na- 
Sickness Appeared To Be Principal, tural inclinations and talents to her 
Cause With Poverty Second _ best advantage, While certain dif- 
Men outnumbered women almost, ferences between man and woman, 


| may rule out each other, but there! - 


tion” goes, gas from hyperacidity, 
“acid -headaches”—from eveggin- 
dulgence in food or smoking —“ind 
nausea are relieved, You feel made 
over; forget you have a stomach, 
Try this Phillips’ way if you have 
any acid stomach upsets. Get either 
the liquid “Philli or the remark- 
able, new a Milk of Magnesia 
Tablets. Only 25¢ for a big box of 
tablets at drug stores. - 


MADE IN 
CANADA 


PHILLIPS’ MILK oF 


Informal planting, say the experts, 
is the most suitable for the average 


A group of skeptical Cambridge two to one in Tokio's 2,681 suicides! Which are inherent in their nature! flower garden. True, it is possible 


scientigts have splashed the first cold 
water on Britain's new enthusiasm 
for anti-gas and anti-air raid pre- 
cautions. . / 

Scoffing at patriots who pass 
around gas masks at tea parties, 
the scientists published a book on! 
experiments they conducted to test 
the home office's suggested safe- 
guards, / 

They declare: ‘ 

1, An average person could remain) 
alive in the ordinary “gas-proof” 
chamber only about three hours. | 

2. If the room were made “gas: | 
tight” it would be too small to live 
in for 12 hours. 

8. The gas mask will give only a 
limited amount of protection—and 
that only to healthy adults with cool 
heads, 


4, Tho oust of meking ‘buildings |’ 


impenetrable by incendiary bombs ts 
prohibitive, - 

The doubting scientists also cen- 
sured the government's plan to pro- 
tect children, contending the “gas- 
proof” baby carriage has the same 
limitations as the “gas-proof” room. 

The “gas-proof’ room suggestion 
by the home office was tested by two 
volunteer debunkers. They released 
deadly carbon monoxide in a “gas- 
proof” room and found the fumes 
leaked out so fast they did no harm. 


in. a 
closed garage helped challenge the 
infallibility of gas masks. A mask- 
ed volunteer coughed when he stood 
within a foot of the smoking pep- 
per 2 
A crude experimental bomb was 
found to burn through a layer of 
sand and a thick table in 30 seconds. 


Decides Ane Punded 


Strange Case At Worthing, England, 
Is Something New . 
A ten-year-old boy,. strong and 


healthy, walks daily to school at 


He is intelligent, able to read and 
write well. 


And the moment he arrives at this 


school he is unable to talk, read or 
write. i 

Doctors are puzzled. They have 
never before heard of such a case. | 
For certain reasons the boy's name 
has been kept secret. 

So interesting is his case that 
Worthing Town Council have made’ 
@ grant of £150 to help in the search | 
for a cure. i 

One theory is that early in his life! 
the boy received a shock which is 


last year, according to official statis-| OY are wrought by environment, can-| 


tics made public, The number was) Not be dismissed, emphasis should be 

an increase of 266 over 1935. | placed on the equality of the sex as 
Principal causes for. the suicides! far as possible,” 

as tabulated by officials were: 915, —_ —- anaes vtors 

sickness; 338, poverty; 344, love | Girl Is Marine Engineer 

affairs; 269, guilty conscience; 241,) 3 


“brooding over one thing” and 217,! scotch Girl Likes Work Even If 
domestic troubles. 4 it Is Hard 


Charlotte Wilson, 17 years of age, 
of St. Andrews, Scotland, has quali- 
fied as a marine engineer and has 
carried out the traditions of her 
| family by going to sea. She is en- 
gineer on her father's fishing vessel, 
The Katharine, and along with her 
pneed and grandfather she will sa’) 

regularly to the fishing in the bay. 

She dresses for her work in a blue 

jersey and overalls. It is her task 
to start, stop and manoeuvre the 
a She also helps to pull in the 


KIDDIES’ CUTE PANTIE-FROCK | 
EVER SO EASY TO MAKE! / 


By Anne Adams 


nets, She admits that it is a hard 
life for a girl, but she much prefers 
it to housework, 


Merely An Exchange 
Ohio Flood Took Piatto And Brought 
Back Another 

The Ohio River flood took Finley 
Johnson's. piano away but it 
brought him another just as good, 

Finley's home is in the Birds 
Point-New Madrid floodway. When 
the basin was ‘inundated his piano 
started floating around and spread- 
ing general havoc, so "I opened the 
doors, shoved the piano out and saw 
it float away,” he said. 

“When I returned to my home I 
found another piano had floated in 


| Seoenah the open doors during the 
| flood.” 


Want Town Renamed 


| People Of Washington Town Think 

Present Name Unsuitable 

| The populace of Secantygrease, 

| Washington, has gone dignified, Citi- 
‘gens are tired of being “Scanty- 

| greasers,” and, furthermore, they be- 

| lieve the name of their community 


Buttoned up-to-the-neck in chic is ™° longer is accurately descriptive. 
adorable Anne Adams Speaks, So they have petitioned county com- 
the story, for it is to the missioners to rename thi y 
roriens Fee Ane Gt A atarts “Delameter.”” “ The gti AB oe 
as : Dn oun ; 

Miss from Two-to-Bight Bd 4 name half a century ago because fat 
this practical pantie-frock and wear was so scarce housewives used tur- 
Lg ye Sh on een nips to grease the frying pans. 
simplicity of the pattern With the 
elear directions for easy making!! We never have been able to under- 
sor ib god CaetsMand’ dnt’ coeg| aad ty 0 man shenid wich to be 
the smart choice of ed or | Some famous. ortly he dies and 
flared sleeves. Youll like h ver- @ither returns to oblivion or con- 
sions made up in colorful cottons tinues elsewhere to shrug his shoul- 
such as di checked Enentm. | dere at what the world calls great- 


The four sharp incisors of the 
by-| beaver are of utmost importance in 
"| this animal's battle for life. Each 
Send twenty conte (380) te cola oF | tou is so arranged that it meets 
Adams w plainly | the tooth of the opposite jaw, and 
Biyie! Num thus is kept ground like an axe edge. 
Anne fda 

No one can make the poor rich by 

i making the rich poor, 


with very large ds and skilled 
| help to do something with straight, 
| dignified rows and borders, But in 
| the average case planting irregularly 
jin clumps will produce the most 
pleasing effects, uch planting, too, 
will add an air of spaciousness, giv- 
ing even tiny backyard gardens the 
mag Pe of much larger affaires. 

here at all possible there should 
be a bit of lawn in the foreground. 
with an irregularly shaped bed of 
flowers around the edges and, pos- 
| sibly, groups of shrubs at the corn- 
jers, Sereening of harsh, straight 
| lines about the house and drives with 
clumps of flowers and shrubs and an 
| oceasional trailing vine over ver- 
andahs or garages will bring the 
whole thing together, It will give 
(the home the appearance of being 
‘part of the landscape rather than 
‘some rigid affair sticking out of the 
‘earth, 


Vv bles, on the other hand, 
should bé planted in straight rows. 
| But here, too, a little planning will 
|help. There are a great many new 
' varieties now available in Canada 
;and by the liberal use of some of 
| these new things, and by adopting 
the rule to make at least three sow- 
‘ings of each variety a week or ten 


‘days apart, production can be ma- 
| terial! increased, The big advant- 
| age the vegetable garden right at 
the door is freshness, but to get full 
| value in this respect it is important 
to have a new supply coming along 
| frequently. Therefore, the modern 
| gardener instead of planting all his 
| lettuce or carrots on the same 
‘day, puts some in the first week and 
| more a little later, 


‘Earlier Opening Date 
| Veanets May Use Hudson Bay Route 
j From August Fifth 

The Hudson Bay route to Church- 
| il, Man., will be opened Aug. 5 this 
| year compared with Aug. 10 last 
| year, The closing date without sur- 
| charge on insurance will be extended 
from Oct. 7 to Oct, 10, This was 
indicated in a reply tabled in the 
| house to a question asked by W. A. 
| Tucker (Lib., Rosthern). 

The opening date will be subject 
| to provision that no vessel may pass 
|Gape Chidley between Aug. 5 and 
Aug. 10 until advised by patrol ship 
N. B. McLean that it is safe to do so, 
| Veanels may use the route between 
| Oct. 11 and 15 by paying a 25 per 
| cent. insurance surcharge. 
| The reply explained the insur- 
ance rates on cargoes was 4 matter 
of competition. Rates on ships using 
| the Hudson Bay route to Churchill 
(had been reduced annually trom 

1930 to 1936 by strong representa- 
tions from the Dominion government 
to the imperial shipping committee, 

The 1936 rates were approximately 
1% per cent. above the St. Lawrence 
‘route. The government would con- 
tinue to press for lower Hudson Bay 
rates, the ministry replied. 


Bullet-Proof Glass 
| Bullet-proof glass, costing $2,000 
for each coach, is being fitted in all 
first class cars of express trains of 
the South Manchuria Railway on the 


\Mine running from Mukden to An- 


tung. This policy has heen adopted 
| because of the many cases of shoot- 
| img at passengers oh this line. 


same B- 


- 


i 


Avoid 
Spoiled 


Dough! 


BAKE WITH 
ROYAL YEAST 


It’s always 


full strength 


Each cake of Royal 
Yeast is sealed in an air- 


tight wrapper — safe 
from all contamination 


b foe G plays an say 
_ J part in making really ap 
tizing bread. le oat be an 
and absolutely pure, to 
avoid any “‘off-taste” in the 
finished loaf. i 
Royal Yeast is always depend- 
able. Every cake is sealed in 
air-tight wrappers—safe from im- 
ities. It keeps its full leaven- 
power. And Royal is the only 
dry yeast that has this special 


For 50 years, Royal has stood for high- 
quality. Tony 7 out of 8 Canadian 
ask for Royal when they buy 
. yeast! They énow it’s reliable. 
: Don’t risk baking failare with uncer- 
tairi yeasts, Always ash for Royal, 


Send for FREE booklet 


[Fits 

jul 
AE 

2F 


Ps 
e 


i 


Hu 
is 


i 
F 


When the trans-Canada airmail 
service is inaugurated, mails will 


CHAPTER XVIII 


Continued 


The doctor smiled on her benig- 
nantly. He had noticed her new wed- 
| ding ring when she had stripped the 
| gloves from her slender fingers 
| “I had hoped you would come back 
|}... . I have often wondered since 
| what happened to you. However, 
| judging by that"—-he indicated her 
| Shining ring “you evidently took 
| what advice of mine you were able 
| to get through your head. You've 
| fotind your vital interest in life, it 
| would appear; your saving interest.” 

Starrs head was in a whirl. She 
hardly dared to believe what her own 
ears heard, this wonder story that 
was coming so casually from the lips 
of the man she had so long believed 
had condemned her, She leaned for- 


the matter with me?” she asked 
through lips that quivered. 

He smiled, and his shoulders 
shrugged carelessly. “Offhand, with- 
out any thorough examination, I 
would say that you are just about as 
normal as any young woman of your 
age. A little too thin, too pale, per- 
haps. Anaemic, Or it could be from 
worry... .” He bent over his desk, 
looking her straight in the eyes, as 
his capable fingers tapped on his desk 
in emphasis, “Young lady, I don't 
know much about Egyptian history, 
I know less of this particular super- 
stition that has been playing hob 
with you. But I do know that the 
most potent factor of any superstition 
is the effect it has on the mind of its 
victim. When you believe a thing 
with all the strength that's in you, 
its quite likely to come true, That's 
all there is to it, and in your case you 
were making it come true, Curse of 
Tut-Amen-Ra—-bunk!” ; 

Starr said, in a still small voice of 
one who was trying to reconcile a 
miracle: “But my father? John Les- 
sing? They—" 

“That man who died on the night 
the tomb was opened—Lessing, did 
you say his name was?- died of a 
tropical fever which must have been 
roming on for some time, and would 
no doubt have taken him anyway, 
curse of no curse. Your father was 


its effect on him. Superstition and 


¥ 
ce 
i 


li 
si 


4 
: 
Hi 


: 
ef 


3% 
Es 
: 
f 


i: 


“My father did not be- 
i “I'll never forget what he 
| told me afterward—‘Love is the only 
true diviner. You'll know that when 
| the time comes’.” Her voice dropped 
| to a whisper, but there was joy in 
it. “I think I've discovered he w 
right.” 7 

Dr. Morgan nodded. emphatically. 
“He was right, my dear young lady 
.. . » Quite right.” 

It took a long time for all that the 


ward, eyes pleading, her body tensed. nee 
“You—you mean there's nothing 


TH REVIEW, REDON, ALBERTA 


| young woman in a nurse's uniform: 
“Piense take Mra. Fairbourne into) 


the examination room, Miss Watker, | How to 


EASE a 


| I be with you presently.” 


It was a woman who felt as if! 
she had been newly born into A 
world that wag the epitome of joy 
and gladness who made her way 
| through the busy city streets, head- 
| ed for her own penthouse apart- 


| 
i 
| 


ment. A woman with a golden glory 
racing through her veins. Her head 
| was up proudly. Eyes and lips) 


| laughed their sheer joy into the face) 
of the world that suddenly was a 
| marvelously glad, happy place—all| 
of it 
A’ miracle -had happened. There) 

j might be those who would attempt) 
| to explain it away with prosaic | 
words, but Starr Ellison Fairbounre) 
knew that it was a miracle. | 
| She was free! Free of the dread| 
| that for years had made life a night-| 


| mare. Free-—-and she was going to 


TWO SIMPLE RULES 
Instead of buying costly medicines 


| have a baby! Michael's child, and) for a cold, try the way almost any 
hers! She was going back to Mi-| doctor you ask will approve as the 
chael. modern way — “ASPIRIN.” 


The way you use it is this: Two 
“Aspirin” tablets the moment you 
feel a cold coming on, taken with a 
full glass of water. Repeat, if neces- 
sary, according to directions in pack- 
-. If throat is sore, gargle with 
three “Aspirin” tablets in 44 glass 
of water for almost instant relief, The 
“Aspirin” acts to fight fever, aches 
and pains of a cold and the cold it- 
self. Relief comes quickly and you 


Tt was 4ll so joyous that rot until 
she stood on the threshold of her 
home from which she had fled did 


she remember the circumstances of 
leaving.. She had only been 
thinking—-how glad Michael would 
be to see her—-how happy over the 
wonderful news she would bring 
him. Now she remembered, ... Mi- 
chael believed she had run away with 
Lance Marlowe All during those have wonderful comfort. 

days she had faced death alone in a| @ “Aspirin” tablets are made in 


somber New York rooming house he| ogee ts redacted Company, Lim- 
Ontario. 


had believed that she was in Lance's 
arms. 

Swift alarm cast a darkening 
shadow across her excitement. she} Demand 
should have made some arrange-| and Get— 


ment to let him know the truth be- 
fore he saw her. She should have ; 

written him of what-she had really AS PrP | Ri N 
done, let him know of the curse of 

Tut-Amen-Ra and what it had so hiants asemnenend veel 

nearly done to her and to him. There _—— —— ” 

was still to be explained those| ™uch to tell Michael, and how he 
anonymouse letters which had come,| Would understand and pity her! How 
ever, but somehow, they, too, could] to tell, but a lifetime to tell it in. 


be explained, she felt sure. “4 — mie os 

~The great problem facing her was: worry Im ‘s dear, 
How would Michasl receive her?| White face now, though! Worry 
Would he and she ever be able to| °V*T her, the wife he loved! His 
find understanding again? voice raced on: 

Using her own key, Starr silently 
entered the pent-house apartment. 
And at the sight which met her eyes 
the very spirit seemed to leave her. 
Too late! 

Michael was standing there in the 
centre of the long, low living room 
with Stephanie Dale, Both of his 
hands gripped Stephanie's shoulders; 
his eyes burned intently into hers, 

He was saying in a strange voice: 

“It was you all the time, Steph- 
anie, How could I have been so 


sailed. He swore he hadn't seen you, 
and I believed him. I've searched 
everywhere for you, Starr, my own 
dear!” 


She murmured: “There is such a 


where to begin.” = 
Michael said: “Don't start just yet. 


lights before her vision. She swayed, 


clutching at the tapestry curtain for 
Of course. It 


In an instant all was confusion,| S0viet Russia States She Will Ad- 
Michael was at her side in two leaps.| _ Bere To The London Protocol 


tain that she is adhering to the Lon- 
He was kissing her on 
lips and hair and eyes, starved 
kisses, as though he would never 
have enough. 

Somehow, in the excitement, Steph- 


United States, France, Germany, 
Italy, and Japan previously had 


“I caught Lance's boat before he then 


don protocol for humanizing sub- “pubble” consisting o! 


anie had slipped away. Starr caught 
just one glimpse of her flitting | 


agreed to the protocol, under which 
submarines are obliged to place crew, 


through the entry way before the| passengers, and papers of merchant | 


Coronation Broadcast 


Not Merely The Pimpire, But The 
Whole Workd Will Listen In 
Not merely the empire but the} 
world will listen to the coronation 
ceremonies May 12 inside and out-| 
side Westminster Abbey. This, the 
first coronation to be broadcast, will) 
teach out in English and foreign) 


The earl marshal is considering the 
feasibility of setting up television 
machinery in the abbey for the 
actual crowning 
Stephen Tallenta, of the British 
Broadcasting commission, hopes and 
expects the outside processions will) 
be caught on the wireless screen tn) 
their full panoply. | 

King George VI. will likely con- | 
clude the momentous day with a per- 
sonal message to his subjects. This) 
will probably be delivered at 8:00) 
pm, GMT. (1 pm, MST.). | 

Twenty microphones will be estab-| 
lished in the abbey itself so 


y 
d 
tongues from a battery of 50 miero- | \ 
phones | 


In any event Siri 


every | you 


Getting up night 
after night, break- 
ing your rest, will 
damage your 
health. Burning, 
| ecalding, suppressed or too frequent 
| seage warns of kidney and bladder 
trouble. It is dangerous to let those 
conditions go unchecked. Soothe and 
strengthen your kidneys and bladder 
with time-proved—~ : 


GIN PILLS 


FOR THE KIDNEYS 


269 


| litle Helps For This Week 


The kingdom of God is within. 
Luke 17:21 


audible detail of the service will be! 


caught. Along the route microphones | 


Lord, take this heart that I 


will be posted at strategic points) would give ; 


and trained observers will describe 
the passing scene. 

The coronation day broadcast will 
probably start about 10:15 am., 
GMT. (the procession times are 
estimated on the basis of precedent) 
when the procession begins from 
Buckingham palace to the abbey. 
And the abbey broadcast is likely to 
ast from 11:15 a.m. until 2:15 pam. 

Immediately following the service 
there may be a break until the re- 
turn procession begins at about 38 
p.m., but this lapse is not definitely 
settled yet. The return procession 
will be covered with even greater 
thoroughness, the scenes at Tralfal- 
gar Square, St. James's palace and 
Oxford-Cirpus to be given special at- 
tention. 

The evening's schedule includes a 
program at 6:30 p.m. entitled “The 
Empire's Homage,” which will link 
up as many parts of the empire as 
possible and which will be featured 
by Individual messages of loyalty 
from each dominion and colony. This 
will conclude with a greeting from 
the United Kingdom spokesman, per- 
haps Prime Minister Baldwin. And 
His Majesty will probably 
| speak. Z 


| Sounds Like Fish Story 


begs tropic fish aquarium, is author- 


| certain about the snoring, but John). 


| Kia Nahaolelua, Hawaiian fisherman, 
| will vouch for it. E 
| “When we are torch’ fishing at 


the noisiness of sleeping fish. - 
A tiny fish that gained fame in 
popular song, definitely “goes to bed” 
at night, reports Potter, “Bed” 
may be a convenient rock on which 
the brilliantly colored little fish may 
lean, or under which it may find a 
sheltered spot. Trigger fish and 
hinalealolo, a common inhabitant of 
island waters, often burrows deep 
into sand as night cpmes. : 
Big parrot fish have a peculiar 


Soviet Russia notified Great Bri-| stom, at least in their Honolulu 


aquarium ‘tanks. They blow a 


of tenuous ma- 


marine warfare, already signed by/ te,ja) remotely similar to a cobweb, 
six European powers. Britain, the and use it as a sleeping bag, Potter 


| noted, 
|} Some fish apparently never rest, 


| Forever to be all Thine own; 

| I to myself no more would live, 
Come Lord 

| alone. 


| The work assigned to the individ- 
| ual soul is to have life in itself, to 
| make its own sphere, whatever it is, 
| sufficient for a reign of God within 
| itself, thankful if with the place and 
| companionship given to us we 

| permitted to build an earthly home 
|of grace and goodness, a home like 
a temple. But if this should be de- 
nied us then we may be able to build 
a home where God shall reign for 
ourselves at least, that we shall not 
| break with our wills, and whether 
joyful or struggling with perplexity 
we shall know His will is law and 
submission .will ever spring from 
communion of apirit and loving trust. 


be Thou my King 


| Food Was Flown More Than 1,700 
Miles For Dinner Guests 

To eat a dinner, all the nine 
courses of which had been flown 
more than 1,700 miles to them, has 
j been the experience of 20 men in 
Sydney, Australia. 

It was given by A. Macalister 
Blain, member of parliament, on be- 
half of his constituents of the vast,: 


con- 
cealed thirteen tn it, and—for what- 
ever it may forebode—the sum of 
the first half is equal to the sum 
‘of the second half. What is obvi- 
ously more alarming is that it is 
divisible by 18, and so has not even 
the virginal merit of a prime num- 
ber. But ore never knows what 


Ulua and other game fish apparently; mysteries lie behind apparently in- 


are ready to gobble a meal at any) nocent numbers. 


Sir Gowland Hop- 
kins said recently that physics was 


time, and remain in almost constant) 


Mikely leave Montreal in the evening | doctor had said to Starr to sink into motion. 


outer door banged on her, Starr and| Ships in a place of safety before, 
after the close of business and be! the dazed girl's brain. Then a sense 


unted by the number 187. And 
her husband were alone. And Mi-| Sinking the vessels, hat y 


ered in Vancouver the next 
morning for afternoon delivery. 

This was one bit of information 
Postmaster-General Elliott was able 
to give the House of Commons when 
questioned about air mail. He was 
unable to say, however, whether the 


. service would start this year or upon 


what terms and conditions the mail 
would be carried. 


Philadelphia bought its first fire- 
“led apparatus from England in 
1 


of wild elation swept her like a magic 
. As the doctor explained it all 


to her, it seemed so simple, so 
natural. Yes, he was quite right 
about her, too. She had fled from his 


office like one possessed on that long- 
ago day, waiting to hear nothing 
| more than: “You won't live another 
| six months.” 

If only she had waited, and talked 


pain and terror she would have been 
saved! But, on the other hand, if 


she had, the whole course of her life 

would have been different. 

might never have met Michael! 
She had worked out her own sal- 


She 


the matter over with him then! What, 


chael was saying: —_——- — 
“Stephanie has just confessed that! The human eye, at a height of five 
she sent you those anonymous let-| feet from the ground, can see an 
ters, darling. I made her come here object 2.9 miles away at sea or over 
to face me, to accuse her. I found! & level plain, 
ene of them after you'd gone, and it caracaiiieal - 
wasn't hard, when I finally got down, Hardships bring out the best there 
to thinking of it, to see Stephanie's is in people, so it is fortunate there 
fine Italian hand... . That came of; 47e¢ enough hardships to go round. 


@ sudden, after I'd been trying to} = = 
on Saag neat) QUICK RELIEF ! 
o 
INDIGESTION! 


break up our marriage, and she took 
Constipa' cleared up, too, after 
taking Srultcactives while. 
Mrs. 


@ childish way of doing it, as child- 
ish as those scrawls of hers that 
a a 
B acierte Sots on 
Sei ra 
was 


Many are capable of making 
strange sounds, various authorities 
| say. “Grunts” are common in the 
Atiantic, and gain their name from 
the croaking noises they emit when 
taken from the water. Trigger fiah 
in Hawaii make ‘whooshing’ sounds. 

Trumpet fish, according to one 
listener, have been heard “tooting” 
in thin strains, “elfin like in qual- 
ity." This same expert, writing in 
“The National Geographical Maga- 
zine,” reported hearing the “whoop- 
whep” of schools of sea drums dart- 
ing beneath an anchored cance on @ 
uiet nigh’ 


Believed to be the oldest photo- 


graph in the world, a Daguerreo- 
taken in 1837 is included in a 


Professor G. H, Hardy tells of a visit 
he paid to an ailing mathématician, 
mentioning casually that the number 
of his taxi was 1729-—‘which seems 
to me rather a dull one.” “On the 
contrary,” was the reply, “it was a 
very interesting one: it is the small- 
est number expressible as a sum of 
cubes in two different ways.”-——-Lon- 
don Observer. ‘ 


Need Building-Up? 
WHEN you feel 


out - of - sorts, 
when you've no 


appetite, or stom- 
-_ gives trouble, 
| gas or dys- 


Wa 


fees - 
Pierce's Clinic, 


Get Ready for 
Spring Planting 


MONARCH | 


Medicine Hat 
NOW SHOWING 


Thurs. Fri, Set 18, 19, 20 of Flowers 
Sten Laurel, Oliver Hardy, in. We have a Large Assortment 
. f Plahts f in his 
“Sor Relations” Bl cae tn Yor Orion 
Two Features Karly. Always a Nice Assort- 
ment of 
“Straight From 
The Shoulder” House Plants 
with Ralph Bellamy AND 
Mon., Tues., Wed., Mar. 22, 23, 24 | Cut Flowers 
Se | Meera 
“ : ” a 
The Plainsman” i} Mills Greenhouse 


oS Gny Gee, hn New Medicine Hat 
Thers., Fri, Set., Mar. 25, 26, 27 Leave Your Orders with 
Linclair Lewis Agnes Maillard 
“Dodsworth” Lecal Agent 


Walter Houston, Ruth Chatterton, . 
Paul Lucus, Mary Aster — 


Mon. Tues., Wet'., Mer 29, 30,13 |- 


Jack Benny, George Jurns, urace 
Allan, Mariha Raye, Mary Bocand, 
Marsh tent, theaner Whitney, in bis Pidelit Bonds 


“college tloliday” 7th Street, Redcliff 


@eeseeeereeeseeeees 
DO 6. 0. nena, 


ce Bros., Ltd. 
INSURANCE 
i Fire, Accident, 
Life, Sickness 


| 651 2nd St. = Medicine Hat 
| Te'ephone (554 


Now Spiiily Showing 


Get Ready For 


Save Your Fuel Bill with 


STORM DOORS 
_ AND WINDOWS 


The Gas City 
Planing Mill 


Fist S Medieme He 


' © Office at Residence 2nd St. * 


How Is Your Subscription? LOOK AT YOUR LABED 


. 6 6.8.6 6.8 6 ©: oe oe @ 


Phone 8160 LEVINSON’S Phone 2160 


NEW . YORK FU FUR E EXCHANGE : 
314 South Railway St. Medicine Hat, Alta. 


We Are 
CASH BUYERS FOR 


Coyete, Weare!, Shunk 
and helo Skins 


HIGHEST PRICE PAID 


We carry a full line of New 
and Second Hand Clothes, 
Tools, Car arts, ete 
WE BUY, SELL AND 
AL bADCH 
ANY. huibG Ub 
VALUE 


¥ a heii hoeeed Lenten poem pee pene pene oe”) 


OUnt’> MID-MONTH SALE 


Replace Pnat Old Floor Covering New 
relt Base Floor Covering, New Vatterns, 39¢ & 49¢ Sq Yd. 
ia ad, $1.25 and $1.39 Sq. Yard 


NEW CHESTERHIELi SUITE bor Evoter, Three Piece 
>uites in good wearing Tapestry $62.75 $79.75 $99.75 
Spring ‘ime is Dressing Up Time 
dew Curtains or Drapes will suuarten up tl at room. 


A Big Selection at Moderaie Prices 


J.J. N.CChE & SON 


Pheu 2787 Nea dedcine Hat Garage 


1 


will ke greetly ' il recteted 
Renewal of your Subsciiption New 


TAR REDCLIFF REVIEW OP THURSDAY, MAR 18th, 1987 


@eervreaneeeeeneeneeee 


KEETLEY JOHNSON * 
For Accident, Fire and * 
4 Sickness Insurance 4 


At Reasonable Prices } 


paces | Mr F Congram commenced | PPP ss tines”, 
; his duties as caretaker of the | 2 
Interesting : Coronation Samples 


school this woe, 
For Spring and Summer 


Local if tems ytodion 
Celebrate the Coranation Year 


Mrs A Bastien and infant so | 
The annual horse ote ‘ts be-|returned home from the hospit 

NEW CLOTHES . NEW PATTERNS: 
MR. W. R. PALMER 


ing conducted in Medicine Ha\jal last week Both mother and 
Will be in this store representing 


today. " hild are getting _ nicely. 
ees 
St. Ambrose W. A. will ho’d] Mr C T Hall gave an interest 
a spring sale ofwork in the par |ing address to the Gordon Mem 
ist hall on Wednesday, April 14 | orial Young People’s Asso. Iasi 
Keep this in mind xxx |week, His subject was the 


fee hikes beth heel “Cambridge Clothes” 


and Calgary is now in fairly| Mr. J. Bergeron, who has been 
good condition. The bug line|suffering from a bad attack 9 
renewed operations last week, |) 00d poisoning, is now impro 

ing and is able to ‘be arounr 


ON SATURDAY, MARCH 20th 


We Invite Your Inspection 


WM Scenvention ot Cains ar a ) Miz slCKS TRADING co. 
as representative of the local] Mr Chas Savel spent last weel 


end visiting hig parents acros’ 
* 8 the river He skated up the 
Mr F Soukup is now confined | river to bis home but had the f 
to his home suffering from aj nisfortune of going through the 
lad attack of cold and infecte.|| ice severe] times, 
throat, He is now improving 
pA i Wheat prices took anothe | , 
The funeral of the late J R| wap in the Winnipeg grain ev | | 
‘unningham took place in Med | ‘ange yesterday from 2 to 2! 


organization. 
« 


Spring | Goods Are Here 


Naas Shirts 


ful Fast Broadcloth Shirts, er and 4 


$1.25 


ne Hat yesterday afternoon ts a Lushel. May futures Collara Attached or Separate; sizes 144 to 164 

om J Knott’s funeral parlor]. 1.36%, June $1.33% Octobe : 
she remains were interred in| ‘1.23% to $1.24 Murray’s Oxfords 

edicine Hat cemetery. . s . GE Just arrived bave these Wonderful Sport Shoes in Camel or 

mee ee Owing to the sudden death o Briar Elks or Brown Bison. Leather or Goodyear 

Mr L Cahoon is still in tc} ieutesant Governor Primr Soles, Style plus Comfort, in these Wonderful — $6. 50 
\ospital but is now much tm: |.heo local legislature will be adj Shoes, Sizes 4to¥, AA toSwidth . . 
»oved and is expected to be curned till next Tuesday. Jt P . t New, Crixp Prints in a Large Assortment 

le to. return home shor't!y cars U.2 legislature cannot rin $ of Patterns add Colors, 5 yds $1.00 
tp t Mr RN: Rose is «1 without a Lieut-Governe Guaranteed Fast Colors, 86 inches wide pine Min ae 88s? 

oking efter the mail. and it is expected a new officia: ° ses 

‘ . ° il be appointed by the federai : : jee Blou pee 

Thee was lots of fun anda ,overnment at once, We have just Received & Shipment of Lovely Sis Svs 

Seve ’retty Styles and a Nice Asso 

' 0d program put on in Gordor 2 ania yg tt gn 7 sie $2.25 to $2.95 
Aemorial school room last even- Great iiterest was taken — in : 

1% The hall was well filled fo {\,c semi-final hocky games be , / ‘A ] P ‘St 
‘we occasion and all thorough'y tween Edmonton and Medicin> e ec ag C4 ore 
‘nyoyed the new stye of pro- {lat Juniors last Saturday and Thi + 

rd St., Medicine Hat 
ram put on ‘Monday nights. The teams Sabres ‘ 


| WTO Very evenly matched but 
| Zamonton won outin a sens3 
‘tional finish in the final game 
ee 


) 


| VISIT THE LESK’S 
| FURNITURE STORE |] 
, ml Set Up Bureau To 


For New Furniture & | Regulate Business 


House Furnishings Legislation providing for the 
‘of sitll eiashagion ated on | sctting up of an import and ex: 
prices thet will appeal toall ||| ;:ort bureau, as part of the pru- 
vincial government’s social 
cvedit plan, ig contained in Bi!) 


—_—— >------ 


Big S-A-L-E of 
Men’s and Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear 


LADIES’ WEAR 
j Searing Goat $12.75 
Monve Shoce, $3.75 | Swagger Suite 44 75 


reg. $4.00, Sale . $2.65 | SPRING HATS 


Dress Shirts $1.29 i 95 and $2.95 E 


reg. $1.75, Sale . SHOE 
Dress Shirts 95¢ eg. Pam Sale $2.95 
reg. $1.°0, Sale... 


vw 


MEN’S WEAR 


a enaeoun: oie 75) 


marketing of natural products Men's Shoes 


cud comodities within the pre 
vince of Alberta details of which 
were made public yesterday. 

= o s 


LESK’S 
Furniture Store 


Third St, Medicine Hat 


FOR SALE — 1 good milk cow 
will be fresh in a few davs, 
Apply JN Dacre.**1 * 


Real Bargains 
in Ail Ladies Wear 


Underwear wedium welt 
Buttonless, Reg. 82.00 $1.08 


Opp. Assiniboia Hotel 3rd St. Medicine Hat 


eet pee pene pee © | 


so . er 


THE ELECTROLUX 


| Gas Refrigerator 


is a Marvel of Science 


Almost Magical 
lt kreezes With Heat 


Different in basie principle than any 
other type of household refrigerator. 


f SILVER’S STORE 
Bargain Fare 


CEAT-#-WILE 
To Caigary erc Fevere 
Going Narch 19, 20,fetemmnurti Merci :: 
Return Fare S.4C Lich Bocce 
Good in Coaches ¢ niy NM & peece Cheers 


éeply Ticket gent 


EASTER 
“Say it With Flowers” 
This Eastertide trom the “hosery” 


Make Arrangemenis for 


Your Bedding Annuals 


lhe Choicest Variety in the West 


Medicine Hat Greehouses, Limited 
Phone—Vay 2431 Night 2330 
The Largest I'roduce.s of Cut Flowers ia the West 


No Moving Parts. Nothing to Wear 
No Radio Interference. No Noise 
Liberal Trade-in Allowance for your old 
Ice-box., See Them at 


Anderson’s Service Station 422 5. &, & 


Associate Dealer: 
NEW WILLARD SERVICE STATION, 3186 &. Railway St, 


it Pays to Advertise in The Review 


ALL OUR ADVERTISERS SAY SO 


—_